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Article
The History and Promise of Shared Space in a Section 35 World
Karen Drake & Brenda L Gunn, eds, Renewing Relationships: Indigenous Peoples and Canada (Saskatoon: Indigenous Law Centre, 2019)
  • Signa A. Daum Shanks, Osgoode Hall Law School of York University
Document Type
Article
Publication Date
1-1-2019
Abstract

When non-Indigenous people made their way to North America, both conflicting and complementary social norms existed between explorers and the land’s original inhabitants. Capable of agreeing with, often challenging, and regularly borrowing each other’s ideas, people of early post-contact times demonstrated how they could have different values and processes but could still cooperate. So while colonialism certainly stifled, if not terminated, some Indigenous processes, local concepts still often prevailed and governed all those who inhabited a space—including the non-Indigenous. Canada’s post-contact past is as much about the adherence to Indigenous jurisdiction as it is about an external force’s interpretation of sovereignty.

Citation Information
Signa A. Daum Shanks. "The History and Promise of Shared Space in a Section 35 World" Karen Drake & Brenda L Gunn, eds, Renewing Relationships: Indigenous Peoples and Canada (Saskatoon: Indigenous Law Centre, 2019) (2019)
Available at: http://works.bepress.com/signa_daumshanks/31/