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UID:20260403T145743EDT-5726TZVBHg@132.216.98.100
DTSTAMP:20260403T185743Z
DESCRIPTION:This event has been accredited by the Barreau du Québec for 1.5
 \nhours of continuing legal education. Activity no. 10042831.\nAbstract\n'
 Aboriginal Title' makes up part of the law of Quebec\, but it\nalways come
 s in borrowed clothes. Existing in pockets of federal\nlaw\, Aboriginal ti
 tle sends us to the language of the common law\,\nor to the sui generis co
 ncept that is the reconciliation of common\nlaw and aboriginal perspective
 s. Historic accommodations of\nAboriginal tenure in Quebec employ a now-de
 funct set of concepts.\nEthnographically\, traditional tenure can not be t
 ranslated from\nindigenous laws to the terms of civil law without losing m
 uch.\nDiscussing the New Relationship Agreement 2008 (Paix des\nBraves) th
 at now uses traditional Cree 'traplines' as a unit\nof forestry management
  in Quebec\, this presentation will consider\nthe risks and benefits of th
 e sui generis interest in land.\nAbout the speaker\nKirsten Anker is assis
 tant professor at McGill\nUniversity. She teaches in the areas of property
  and Aboriginal\npeoples and the law\, and has research interests that com
 bine\nproperty\, Aboriginal title\, legal theory\, translation studies\,\n
 anthropology\, education\, evidence\, and alternative dispute\nresolution.
  Her doctoral dissertation\, entitled 'The Unofficial Law\nof Native Title
 : Recognition of Legal Pluralism in Australia'\,\nexplores various aspects
  of claiming Native (Aboriginal) Title as a\nway to inspire a re-imaginati
 on of law.\nWith undergraduate degrees from the University of Sydney in\nP
 hysics and Law\, Professor Anker was a Boulton Fellow at McGill in\n2004. 
 She is currently one of the principal researchers on a\nproject in partner
 ship between McGill Faculty of Law and Justice\nCanada\, investigating the
  inclusion of Indigenous legal traditions\nin the Transsystemic Legal Educ
 ation program at\nMcGill.\n
DTSTART:20111123T173000Z
DTEND:20111123T190000Z
LOCATION:Chancellor Day Hall\, CA\, QC\, Montreal\, H3A 1W9\, 3644 rue Peel
SUMMARY:Aboriginal Title in Quebec: always in a sui generis language?
URL:https://www.mcgill.ca/channels/event/aboriginal-title-quebec-always-sui
 -generis-language-177399
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