没有权利人的权利是空洞的:OHLJ关于识别原住民权利的特刊介绍

IF 0.8 Q2 LAW OSGOODE HALL LAW JOURNAL Pub Date : 2021-01-14 DOI:10.60082/2817-5069.3615
Karen Drake
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引用次数: 0

摘要

《奥斯古德·霍尔法律杂志》这期特刊的重点是确定由1982年《宪法法》第35(1)条承认和肯定的权利的持有人。虽然加拿大和各省政府以及行业支持者都认为印第安人法案是第35条的权利持有人,但Kent McNeil对相关法理的分析表明,这一问题应参照土著人民自己的法律来解决。因此,如果相关的原住民自己的法律不是基于实证主义,那么第35条权利持有人必须拥有一个总体治理结构的假设是没有根据的。Naiomi Metallic的尖锐批评表明,R v Bernard案的推理正是被这种实证主义假设所捕获,即法院认为较小的Mìgmaq集体(与较大的Mìgmaq国家相反)必须是权利持有人,因为较大的Mìgmaq国家缺乏“超级酋长”。戈登·克里斯蒂(Gordon Christie)在第35条法理中确定了另一种形式的捕获:土著人被认为是社会文化团体,而不是政治团体,土著人的权利被认为是文化活动,而不是政府行使管辖权的权力。自由主义抓住了这两种假设,案文或对第35(1)条的有目的的解释都不支持这两种假设。Sara Mainville的文章揭示了在Kelly命令的背景下,加拿大法律与原住民法律之间的冲突,法院将其描述为如何在中间动议中识别权利持有人的困境的实际解决方案。梅因维尔证明,凯利命令的对抗性影响违反了建立共识这一不可磨灭的法律原则。考虑到加拿大法理和土著法律之间的各种冲突,Paul Chartrand认为权利持有人的身份应该通过政治参与者之间的政治谈判来决定,而不是由法院决定,这也许并不令人惊讶。同样,杰森·马登认为,加拿大最高法院的法理要求加拿大和省政府有义务与土著人民谈判,以确定他们的身份
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A Right Without a Rights-Holder Is Hollow: Introduction to OHLJ’s Special Issue on Identifying Rights-Bearing Aboriginal Peoples
Abstract The focus of this special issue of the Osgoode Hall Law Journal is on identifying holders of rights which are recognized and affirmed by section 35(1) of the Constitution Act, 1982. While Canadian and provincial governments and industry proponents have assumed that Indian Act bands are section 35 rights-holders, Kent McNeil’s analysis of the relevant jurisprudence reveals that this issue is to be resolved with reference to Aboriginal peoples’ own laws. As such, the assumption that a section 35 rights-holder must possess an overarching governance structure is unwarranted if the relevant Aboriginal people’s own laws are not grounded in positivism. Naiomi Metallic’s incisive critique demonstrates that the reasoning in R v Bernard was captured by precisely this type of positivist assumption when the court held that smaller Mìgmaq collectives—as opposed to the larger Mìgmaq nation—must be the rights-holder because the larger Mìgmaq nation lacked a ‘Super Chief’. Gordon Christie identifies another form of capture within the section 35 jurisprudence: Aboriginal peoples are presumed to be socio-cultural bodies and not political bodies, and Aboriginal rights are presumed to be cultural activities and not governmental powers to exercise jurisdictional authority. Both presumptions are captured by liberalism and neither is supported by the text or by a purposive interpretation of section 35(1). Sara Mainville’s article uncovers a conflict between Canadian and Indigenous law in the context of a Kelly order, which courts characterize as a practical solution to the dilemma of how to identify the rights-holder on an interlocutory motion. Mainville demonstrates that the adversarial effects of a Kelly order contravene the Anishinaabe legal principle of consensus-building. Perhaps unsurprisingly given these various conflicts between Canadian jurisprudence and Indigenous laws, Paul Chartrand argues that the identity of rights-holders should be decided through political negotiations between political actors, and not by the courts. Similarly, Jason Madden argues that the Supreme Court of Canada’s jurisprudence entails a duty on Canadian and provincial governments to negotiate with an Aboriginal people to identify the
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