Apr. 27th, 2007
So, I've got my term paper for AbLaw due on Monday, and I'm kinda beating my head against the wall. Because my topic is "Sovereignty and Indigenous Peoples", and my outline is
What is the meaning of “Peoples”?
What is the meaning of “Sovereignty”?
Indigenous Sovereignty: Moving from Imagining to Actuality, Three Models
Part V: Critical Analysis
Part VI: Conclusion
What's the problem here? I have 20-25 double-spaced pages to do this.
Doh.
So, here's a forlorn plea: any Australians or Americans (or Canadians) who have any kind of familiarity/knowledge/vague ideas on how your country deals with the issue of indigenous sovereignty... help? I've done lots of readings, but there are conflicting bits here and there and since I'm not familiar with the countries in question, it's hard to tell which articles/books are putting forward well-reasoned, realistic points of view, and which are spouting gibberish that would leave most Australians/Americans perplexed and wondering if they're talking about the same country. And since I've only got a couple pages to spend on each country, I don't want to fritter it away reproducing said gibberish.
Any ideas? Attitudes, articles, judgments, websites, general feel for indigenous sovereignty in your country? Anything that, if I don't write about it, would make an Australian/American slapping their forehead and saying How could you MISS that??!!
- Introduction
- Dueling Meanings: Who is “Indigenous” and Who are “Peoples”
- As defined by International Law
- As defined by Indigneous People(s)
- As defined by International Law
- International context
- Indigenous context
- Canadian context
- Indigenous Sovereignty in the United States
- Indigenous Sovereignty in Australia
- Indigenous Sovereignty in Canada
- Indigenous Sovereignty in Australia
- What does international law acknowledge/not acknowledge and what understandings must be addressed?
- How does domestic application accord with / not accord with domestic application of law in an Indigenous context?
- Can International Law address Indigenous sovereignty meaningfully? Can domestic law?
- Can Indigenous law? How?
What's the problem here? I have 20-25 double-spaced pages to do this.
Doh.
So, here's a forlorn plea: any Australians or Americans (or Canadians) who have any kind of familiarity/knowledge/vague ideas on how your country deals with the issue of indigenous sovereignty... help? I've done lots of readings, but there are conflicting bits here and there and since I'm not familiar with the countries in question, it's hard to tell which articles/books are putting forward well-reasoned, realistic points of view, and which are spouting gibberish that would leave most Australians/Americans perplexed and wondering if they're talking about the same country. And since I've only got a couple pages to spend on each country, I don't want to fritter it away reproducing said gibberish.
Any ideas? Attitudes, articles, judgments, websites, general feel for indigenous sovereignty in your country? Anything that, if I don't write about it, would make an Australian/American slapping their forehead and saying How could you MISS that??!!