Summer Timetable

JPI201H1F L0101

Indigenous Politics in Canada

Themes

This course focuses on the legal and political relationship between Canada’s Indigenous peoples and the Canadian state. The course provides a detailed genealogy of the relevant legal and political touchstones of the relationship from the Hawthorn Report in 1966 to the present-day Unist’ot’en roadblocks on Wet’suwet’en territory in British Columbia. Students will gain a sense of the historical and ongoing pendulum-like legal and political relationship between the Canadian state and Indigenous communities. Students will become familiar with a shortlist of relevant legal and political concepts: Aboriginal rights, treaty relationship, nation-to-nation, reconciliation, resurgence, honour of the Crown, duty to consult, and Indigenous spirituality.

Texts

JR Miller, Skyscrapers Hide the Heavens: A History of Native-Newcomer Relations in Canada, Fourth Edition, University of Toronto Press, 2018 (Only this edition)

Format and Requirements

TBA

Prerequisites

4.0 credits, or 1.0 credit in POL/ JPA/ JPF/ JPI/ JPR/ JPS/ JRA courses, or INS201Y1

Exclusions
POL308H1/POLC56H3