The next deadline for submissions is: September, 2008.
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Recent Articles
- Volume 4 Staff
- The Justice System in Canada: Does it Work for Aboriginal People?
- Maori Women Confront Discrimination: Using International Human Rights Law to Challenge Discriminatory Practices
- "Indigeneity" as Self-Determination
- Establishing Autonomous Regimes in the Republic of China: The Salience of International Law for Taiwan's Indigenous Peoples
- Sovereignty in Law: The Justiciability of Indigenous Sovereignty in Australia, the United States and Canada
- Ogawa v. Hokkaido (Governor), the Ainu Communal Property (Trust Assets) Litigation
- Paul G. McHugh, Aboriginal Societies and the Common Law: A History of Sovereignty, Status and Self-Determination
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Welcome from all four directions.
The Indigenous Law Journal is dedicated to developing dialogue and scholarship in the field of Indigenous legal issues both in Canada and internationally. We encourage submissions from all perspectives. Our central concerns are Indigenous legal systems and legal systems as they affect Indigenous peoples.
We are governed by core values that include recognition:
- that Indigenous legal systems are best learned from the context and perspectives of Indigenous peoples;
- that to ensure balance and cultural authenticity, both Aboriginal and non-Aboriginal participation is required in all of the journal's editorial and business decisions; and
- that the pursuit of excellence in scholarship is rooted in both an understanding of the past, and a commitment to innovation.
We are a primary source of original, top-quality articles, notes, case comments, and reviews. Our call for submissions goes to hundreds of law schools worldwide.
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