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Law Indigenous Peoples

Moving Toward Justice

Legal Traditions and Aboriginal Justice

foreword by Tony Penikett

edited by John Whyte

Publisher
UBC Press
Initial publish date
Jun 2008
Category
Indigenous Peoples, Criminology
  • Paperback / softback

    ISBN
    9781895830330
    Publish Date
    Jun 2008
    List Price
    $38.00

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Description

The struggle to reform Canada’s justice system is nothing short of a cry for justice itself, and the response to this cry is too slow and too narrow. These essays include analyses of the challenges of legal pluralism, restorative justice, gender and race in sentencing, notions of community, and reconciliation in Aboriginal justice. Part I of the book explores a series of specific issues that have arisen from reforms already made—the legal and political context for Aboriginal justice, theories of law and the constitution, as well as theories of development and administration that compel much broader initiatives of Aboriginal self-government. Part II examines specific initiatives and the problems some of them have created.

About the authors

Tony Penikett, currently a Vancouver-based mediator, was deputy minister of negotiations for the British Columbia government and, later, deputy labour minister. A former Yukon premier, Penikett has been involved in aboriginal rights negotiations for over twenty years. He also teaches courses in negotiations in Simon Fraser University’s Dialogue and Master of Public Policy programs.

Tony Penikett's profile page

John Whyte taught law and served as Dean of Law at Queen's University. He served as Saskatchewan's Director of Constitutional Law during Canada's constitutional patriation process and later served as Saskatchewan's Deputy Attorney General and Deputy Minister of Justice. 

John Whyte's profile page

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