The Review is a subscriber-based print journal. Articles are available through HeinOnline, EBSCO, & GALE. They will be available in open access on this website as of October 2024 – one year from date of publication.
Articles
- Aboriginal Rights, Legislative Reconciliation and Constitutionalism
Naiomi S Walqwan Metallic
- Undoing the Colonial Double-Bind: Interpretation and Justification in Aboriginal Law
Joshua Nichols and Amy Swiffen
- Zeus, Metis and Athena: " The Path Towards the Constitutional Recognition of Full-Blown Indigenous Legal Orders
Jean Leclair
- A Currency Model of Constitutional Legitimacy
Nomi Claire Lazar
- The House of Federation of Ethiopia: Unfit for Federalism
Legesse Tigabu Mengie
Book Reviews
- Review of David Dyzenhaus, The Long Arc of Legality: Hobbes, Kelsen, Hart (Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press, 2022)
Ryan Beaton
- Review of Allan C Hutchinson, Democracy and Constitutions: Putting Citizens First (Toronto: University of Toronto Press, 2021)
Shaun Fluker and Mitchell Folk
Volume 26.1 & 27.1 (2022-2023)
The Review is a subscriber-based print journal. Articles are available through HeinOnline, EBSCO, & GALE. They will be available in open access on this website as of November 2023 – one year from date of publication.
Articles
The Review is a subscriber-based print journal. Articles are available through HeinOnline, EBSCO, & GALE. They will be available in open access on this website as of May 2023 – one year from date of publication.
Articles
Book Review
Review Essay
The Review is a subscriber-based print journal. Articles are available through HeinOnline and EBSCO. They will be available in open access on this website as of November 2022 – one year from date of publication.
Articles
Review Essay
Volume 25.1 (2019 - 2020)
The Review is a subscriber-based print journal. Articles are available through HeinOnline and EBSCO.
Articles
Review Essay
Volume 24.2 (2019 - 2020)
The Review is a subscriber-based print journal. Articles are available through HeinOnline and EBSCO. They will be available in open access on this website as of July 2021 – one year from date of publication.
Table of Contents
Articles
Review Essay
The Review is a subscriber-based print journal. Articles are available through HeinOnline and EBSCO.
Special Issue: Treaty Federalism
Co-Editors: Joshua Nichols, University of Alberta & Amy Swiffen, Concordia University
The implementation of the United Nations Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples (UNDRIP) off ers a way to re-imagine what Indigenous self-determination and reconciliation might mean in Canada and elsewhere. It makes it possible to speak of Indigenous peoples as nations within a multinational democratic federation, rather than minority populations within a state. The papers in this issue, which were delivered at a Workshop held at the University of Alberta in May 2019, explore ‘treaty federalism’ which is a re-imagining of what we understand as sovereignty and the foundation of the Canadian state.
Table of Contents
Articles
UNDRIP, Treaty Federalism, and Self-Determination
Michael Asch
UN Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples and Treaty Federalism in Canada
James [Sa’ke’j] Youngblood Henderson
Indigenous Peoples and Interstitial Federalism in Canada
Robert Hamilton
Constitutional Reconciliation and the Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms
Amy Swiffen
Legal Pluralism and Caron v Alberta: A Canadian Case Study in Constitutional Interpretation
Ryan Beaton
Book Reviews
John Borrows, Larry Chartrand, Oonagh E. Fitzgerald, and Risa Schwartz, eds, Braiding Legal Orders: Implementing the United Nations Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples, (Centre for International Governance Innovation (CIGI), 2019)
Nigel Bankes
John Borrows, Law’s Indigenous Ethics, (University of Toronto Press, April 2019)
Ferdinand Gemoh