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  3. Vol 56, No 3: Law, Justice, and Reconciliation in Post-TRC Canada

Vol 56, No 3: Law, Justice, and Reconciliation in Post-TRC Canada

Published: 2019-03-26

Introduction

  • Introduction

    Catherine Bell, Hadley Friedland
    • PDF

Articles

  • Envisioning Indigenous Community Courts to Realize Justice in Canada for First Nations

    Angelique EagleWoman
    • PDF
  • Cannabis, Reconciliation, and the Rights of Indigenous Peoples: Prospects and Challenges for Cannabis Legalization in Canada

    Konstantia Koutouki, Katherine Lofts
    • PDF
  • The Tin Ear of the Court: Ktunaxa Nation and the Foundation of the Duty to Consult

    Robert Hamilton, Joshua Nichols
    • PDF
  • “We the North” As the Dispossession of Indigenous Identity and a Slogan of Canada’s Enduring Colonial Legacy

    Daniel W. Dylan
    • PDF
  • Adoption Constitutionalism: Anishinaabe Citizenship Law at Fort William First Nation

    Damien Lee
    • PDF
  • Reconciliation Through Relationality in Indigenous Legal Orders

    Alan Hanna
    • PDF
  • The Harms Caused: A Narrative of Intergenerational Responsibility

    Maegan Hough
    • PDF
  • Novel Science or Oral History? The Admissibility of Co-Produced Information in Canadian Courts

    David Isaac
    • PDF
  • Urban Indigenous Courts: Possibilities for Increasing Community Control Over Justice

    Gabe Boothroyd
    • PDF

Case Comment

  • Supreme Court of Canada Cases Strengthen Argument for Municipal Obligation to Discharge Duty to Consult: Time to Put Neskonlith to Rest

    Angela D’Elia Decembrini, Shin Imai
    • PDF

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The Alberta Law Review (ALR) is a student-run publication whose primary purpose is to enhance discourse on Canadian legal issues. Founded in 1955, the ALR is published by the Alberta Law Review Society, an organization consisting of law students at the University of Alberta and the University of Calgary. Built upon the hard work of student editors at both law faculties, the ALR is published every quarter and has roughly 1,000 pages per volume. 

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