Indigenous Land Rights and Reconciliation Podcast

By: CFRC Podcast Network
  • Summary

  • Questions of land rights are at the root of most current conflicts between indigenous peoples and the wider state. Competing conceptions of the land and authority over the land intersect with conflicts around resource extraction, the terms of consultation and consent, and the political status of indigenous peoples. Without resolving the conflicts around land in a fair and collaborative manner, real reconciliation will be difficult to achieve. This podcast presents a series of six live panel presentations delivered at the Indigenous Land Rights and Reconciliation workshop at Queen’s University in September of 2019. The series theorizes the justifications for land rights from indigenous perspectives and investigates how these understandings challenge and enrich theories in the Western tradition. The discussion also confronts the implications of these understandings for the political and legal practice. The Indigenous Land Rights and Reconciliation project sought to meet three key objectives: to provide an open platform for indigenous people to voice their views on land, self-governance, and relationships; to explore ways of indigenizing political theory and method; and to promote respectful and reciprocal collaboration between indigenous and non-indigenous scholars. We encourage you to visit our website at www.queensu.ca/csdd/landrights to follow the project and its future efforts. Thank-you to our Sponsors and Supporters Government of Canada’s Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council Forskningsradet: The Research Council of Norway Department of Political Studies, Queen’s University Centre for the Study of Democracy and Diversity, Queen’s University Globalizing Minority Rights, UiT: The Arctic University of Norway CFRC Kingston The Louis Riel Reel is performed and provided by Traditional Métis Fiddler, Patti Kusturok https://www.pattikusturok.com/
    © 2024 CFRC Podcast Network
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Episodes
  • Episode 6 – Interacting with the State, Part II
    Feb 19 2020

    The “Interacting with the State” panels emphasize different legal regimes which currently define relationships between indigenous people’s and the state. Our final episode of the series features discussions on the duty to Consult, Metis land claims, and legal definitions of territory and sovereignty.

    Featuring:

    • Avigail Eisenberg (University of Victoria) “Consultation, Consent, and Resistance”
    • Janique Dubois (University of Ottawa) “To What End? Negotiating Metis Land Rights in Manitoba”
    • Mark Walters (Queen’s University) “Reconciling Legal Ideas about Territory and Sovereignty in Canada”
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    56 mins
  • Episode 5 – Land Restitution as Reconciliation
    Feb 12 2020

    This episode features a rich discussion of the movements toward reconciliation which will be necessary in order to fruitfully navigate these ongoing tensions around land and land rights.

    Featuring:

    • Esme Murdock (San Diego State University) “Speaking Land, Speaking Ourselves”
    • Dimitri Panagos (Memorial University of Newfoundland) “Reconciliation, Duties and Distributive Justice”
    • Avery Kolers (University of Louisville) “Territorial Loss and Reconciliation” , presented by Burke Hendrix

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    45 mins
  • Episode 4 – Non-Indigenous Understandings of Land
    Feb 5 2020

    This episode’s discussion focuses on largely Western ideas regarding the ontology of land and the relationships between people, the state, and the land, offering a critical perspective on the dominant and colonial approaches to land which have historically guided our understandings of land and land rights.

    Featuring:

    • Alejandra Mancilla (University of Oslo) “A Continent of and for Whiteness? “White” Colonialism and the 1959 Antarctic Treaty”
    • Kerstin Reibold (UiT: Arctic University of Norway) “The Cultural and Historical Perspective of Welfare Egalitarianism”
    • Margaret Moore (Queen’s University) “Indigenous Land Rights and State Territorial Rights”
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    45 mins

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In the spirit of reconciliation, Audible acknowledges the Traditional Custodians of country throughout Australia and their connections to land, sea and community. We pay our respect to their elders past and present and extend that respect to all Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander peoples today.