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2 At the Corner of Hawks and Powell: Settler Colonialism, Indigenous People, and the Conundrum of Double Permanence
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Chapters in this book
- Frontmatter i
- Contents v
- Introduction 1
- 1 Su-taxwiye: Keeping My Name Clean 21
- 2 At the Corner of Hawks and Powell: Settler Colonialism, Indigenous People, and the Conundrum of Double Permanence 35
- 3 Look at Your “Pantses”: The Art of Wearing and Representing Indigenous Culture as Performative Relationship 57
- 4 Indigenous Legal Traditions, De-sacralization, Re-sacralization and the Space for Not-Knowing 67
- 5 Mino-audjiwaewin: Choosing Respect, Even in Times of Conflict 77
- 6 “How Could You Sleep When Beds Are Burning?” Cultural Appropriation and the Place of Non-Indigenous Academics 99
- 7 Who Should Teach Indigenous Law? 115
- 8 Reflections on Cultural Appropriation 139
- 9 Turning Away from the State: Cultural Appropriation in the Shadow of the Courts 155
- 10 Writing on Indigenous Rights from a Non-Indigenous Perspective 171
- 11 Guided by Voices? Perspective and Pluralism in the Constitutional Order 185
- 12 NONU WEL,WEL TI,Á NE TȺ,EȻEȽ: Our Canoe Is Really Tippy 195
- 13 Sharp as a Knife: Judge Begbie and Reconciliation 209
- 14 On Getting It Right the First Time: Researching the Constitution Express 253
- 15 Confronting Dignity Injustices 275
- Contributors 305
- Index 313
Chapters in this book
- Frontmatter i
- Contents v
- Introduction 1
- 1 Su-taxwiye: Keeping My Name Clean 21
- 2 At the Corner of Hawks and Powell: Settler Colonialism, Indigenous People, and the Conundrum of Double Permanence 35
- 3 Look at Your “Pantses”: The Art of Wearing and Representing Indigenous Culture as Performative Relationship 57
- 4 Indigenous Legal Traditions, De-sacralization, Re-sacralization and the Space for Not-Knowing 67
- 5 Mino-audjiwaewin: Choosing Respect, Even in Times of Conflict 77
- 6 “How Could You Sleep When Beds Are Burning?” Cultural Appropriation and the Place of Non-Indigenous Academics 99
- 7 Who Should Teach Indigenous Law? 115
- 8 Reflections on Cultural Appropriation 139
- 9 Turning Away from the State: Cultural Appropriation in the Shadow of the Courts 155
- 10 Writing on Indigenous Rights from a Non-Indigenous Perspective 171
- 11 Guided by Voices? Perspective and Pluralism in the Constitutional Order 185
- 12 NONU WEL,WEL TI,Á NE TȺ,EȻEȽ: Our Canoe Is Really Tippy 195
- 13 Sharp as a Knife: Judge Begbie and Reconciliation 209
- 14 On Getting It Right the First Time: Researching the Constitution Express 253
- 15 Confronting Dignity Injustices 275
- Contributors 305
- Index 313