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I Am a Mi’kmaq Lawyer, and I Despair Over Colten Boushie
Articles, Book Chapters, & Popular Press
  • Naiomi Metallic, Assistant Professor and Chancellor’s Chair in Aboriginal Law and Policy at the Schulich School of Law at Dalhousie University
Document Type
Editorial
Publication Date
1-1-2018
Keywords
  • Colten Boushie,
  • Death of Colten Boushie,
  • Aboriginal Law and Policy,
  • Criminal Law and Indigenous People
Abstract

My law school recently organized a panel on Gerald Stanley’s acquittal in the death of Colten Boushie. Timing was such that the talk occurred two days after the Saskatchewan Crown announced it would not be seeking an appeal of the verdict. I was reluctant to participate on the panel, not because I wasn’t interested in the subject, but because the case affects me in a deeply emotional way that most other topics do not (and I frequently speak on complex and difficult Aboriginal law and policy topics). I decided the only way I could talk about this was by getting personal and emotional, even though that is usually not my style. In the end, I am glad that I did. Many in attendance told me my remarks helped them to appreciate this case in a new way. So I thought I would seek to publish my remarks, edited slightly, in the hopes it may do the same for others.

Citation Information
Naiomi Metallic, "I Am a Mi'kmaq Lawyer and I Despair Over Colten Boushie" (18 March 2018), online: The Conversation < https://theconversation.com/i-am-a-mikmaq-lawyer-and-i-despair-over-colten-boushie-93229 > [perma.cc/8MLR-Z4HN].