如果看起来像主权,为什么土著所有权是财产?

Douglas Amo Sanderson Binashii, Amitpal C. Singh
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引用次数: 0

摘要

根据加拿大最高法院的规定,土著人的所有权是一种财产权,尽管是一种独特的财产权。最重要的是,这种权利受到固有的限制:所有权土地的使用不能剥夺今世后代使用土地的权利。原住民的所有权也受到对转让的限制,其根源在于原住民的法律制度,这些法律制度早于并延续了王室主权的主张。在本文中,我们认为原住民所有权的这些特征不是对财产权的繁重的司法创新,而是主权权利的基本轮廓。也就是说,法院自己对土著所有权的描述与对产权的合理理论理解不符。土著居民的头衔更类似于一种主权权利——制定领土使用法律的权利。原住民地契是对土地的立法管辖权。现有文献虽然倾向于认为原住民所有权是一种主权权利,但缺乏统一的理论基础,无法果断地摒弃法院的财产范式。特别是,所有现存的说法都认为固有的限制是无法解释的。本文的论述对原住民称谓的内在限制以及所有自成一体的要素进行了理论化和解释,并展示了它们之间的相互联系。我们的观点还回答了一些最高法院的财产范例没有回答的问题,包括:(1)哪些法律主要管辖所有权土地;(2)有权质疑业权土地的任何特定用途是否违反固有限制;(3)与原住民业权土地重叠的私有土地权益状况如何;(4)根据强调土著人民从未放弃其主权的法理学发展,土著所有权原则应如何更新?
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Why Is Aboriginal Title Property if It Looks Like Sovereignty?
According to the Supreme Court of Canada, Aboriginal title is a property right, albeit of a distinctive kind. Most significantly, the right is subject to an inherent limit: title lands cannot be used in a way that deprives present and future generations of the right to use the land. Aboriginal title is also encumbered by a restraint on alienation, and has its source in Aboriginal legal systems that predate and survive the assertion of Crown sovereignty. In this paper, we argue that these features of Aboriginal title are not burdensome judicial innovations on a property right, but are instead the essential contours of a sovereign right. That is, the Court’s own description of Aboriginal title does not comport with sound theoretical understandings of a property right. Aboriginal title is much more akin to a right of sovereignty—the right to make laws about the use of a territory. Aboriginal title is the right of law-making jurisdiction over the title lands. The existing literature, while edging towards the view that Aboriginal title is a sovereign right, has lacked the unifying theoretical basis needed to decisively dispatch the Court’s property paradigm. In particular, all extant accounts find the inherent limit inexplicable. The account in this article theorizes and explains the inherent limit, as well as all of the sui generis elements of Aboriginal title, and shows their interconnectedness. Our view additionally answers a number of questions that the Court’s property paradigm does not, including: (1) what laws primarily govern title lands; (2) who has standing to question whether any particular use of title land violates the inherent limit; (3) what is the status of private land interests that overlap with Aboriginal title lands; and (4) how should the doctrine of Aboriginal title be updated in light of jurisprudential developments emphasizing that Indigenous peoples never ceded their sovereignty?
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来源期刊
CiteScore
1.10
自引率
16.70%
发文量
32
期刊介绍: The Canadian Journal of Law & Jurisprudence serves as a forum for special and general jurisprudence and legal philosophy. It publishes articles that address the nature of law, that engage in philosophical analysis or criticism of legal doctrine, that examine the form and nature of legal or judicial reasoning, that investigate issues concerning the ethical aspects of legal practice, and that study (from a philosophical perspective) concrete legal issues facing contemporary society. The journal does not use case notes, nor does it publish articles focussing on issues particular to the laws of a single nation. The Canadian Journal of Law & Jurisprudence is published on behalf of the Faculty of Law, Western University.
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