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False Western Universalism in Constitutionalism? The 1867 Canadian Constitution and the Legacy of the Residential Schools was published in The Canadian Constitution in Transition on page 270.
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This collection brings together a diverse array of scholars to analyse the issues and points of tension that have marked Sri Lanka’s uncertain peace.
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This chapter explores the promise of refuge encompassed within the Canadian domestic and international refugee regime. While relying on my own lived experience as a survivor of war fleeing to what is now known as Canada, I contrast the promises of
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This book brings together Indigenous, Third World and Settler perspectives on the theory and practice of decolonizing law. Colonialism, imperialism, and settler colonialism continue to affect the lives of racialized communities and Indigenous Peoples around the world. Law, in its many iterations, has played an active role in the dispossession and disenfranchisement of colonized peoples. Law and its various institutions are the means by which colonial, imperial, and settler colonial programs and policies continue to be reinforced and sustained. There are, however, recent and historical examples in which law has played a significant role in dismantling colonial and imperial structures set up during the process of colonization. This book combines usually distinct Indigenous, Third World and Settler perspectives in order to take up the effort of decolonizing law: both in practice and in the concern to distance and to liberate the foundational theories of legal knowledge and academic engagement from the manifestations of colonialism, imperialism and settler colonialism. Including work by scholars from the Global South and North, this book will be of interest to academics, students and others interested in the legacy of colonial and settler law, and its overcoming.
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Taking into account what we have already learned so far from Third World Approaches to International Law (TWAIL) scholars, Indigenous scholars, and other critical race scholars, in this short chapter we try to unpack the meaning and scope of race and ethnicity, through our own standpoints. First, we provide a critical overview of the race and ethnicity scholarship, paying close attention to the commentary of a few key interlocutors for our project in the short space of this chapter in the much larger project of this handbook. Next, we examine the place of race, and its displacement by ethnicity, in international law and regional human rights instruments. Tracking the social and scholarly move from biological determinism to social construction of what these concepts signify, we also assess the pragmatic and ideological reasons for a parallel ambiguity of these terms in international and human rights law. Ultimately, following our key interlocutors, we see this lack of definition and displacement of race as a tactic in the larger project of splitting solidarities and resetting the uneasy routes to more radical worldmaking. We conclude by briefly discussing two cases that show the pitfalls of juridification and the sometimes unintended and unsolicited transformations wrought by “ethnoracial” litigation.
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Author / Editor
- Beverly Jacobs (1)
- Reem Bahdi (1)
- Sujith Xavier (6)
- Valerie Waboose (1)