BEGIN:VCALENDAR VERSION:2.0 PRODID:-//132.216.98.100//NONSGML kigkonsult.se iCalcreator 2.20.4// BEGIN:VEVENT UID:20251014T224210EDT-5753B7E7WV@132.216.98.100 DTSTAMP:20251015T024210Z DESCRIPTION:Le Centre sur les droits de la personne et le pluralisme juridi que a le plaisir d'accueillir Dwight Newman\, professeur de droit et titul aire de la Chaire de recherche du Canada sur les droits des Autochtones da ns le droit constitutionnel et international\, Université du Saskatchewan\ , et professeur invité à la Faculté de droit de l'Université de Montréal ( jan.-mars 2017). Il parlera d'un de ses articles récents où il cherche à t rouver un équilibre entre différents droits et intérêts dans le développem ent des ressources naturelles qui touche les communautés autochtones.\n\nR ésumé\n\n[En anglais seulement] Professor Newman will discuss a recent pap er of his\, where he considers ways in which imposed judicial and imposed statutory forms of Indigenous property have worked against opportunities f or Indigenous economic growth and discusses incremental ways of seeking to improve the situation.\n\nOn the judicial side\, the doctrine of Aborigin al title has seen courts homogenize different systems of Indigenous proper ty to a greater degree than often realized\, sometimes overriding cultural values of actual Indigenous communities in favour of the values certain s ocietal sectors would prefer them to have. The statutory side has seen the continued imposition of similar ideas\, albeit with some recent changes b eginning to show some ways forward in enabling Indigenous communities to a ccess the economic value of their land.\n\nIn contributing to thought on w ays of transcending underlying public/private law divides and forms of bij uridical legal domination while seeking economic opportunities for Indigen ous communities\, the paper will show the effective need in a context like Aboriginal law to move nimbly between more abstract theory and detailed c onsideration of matters like the regulatory component of land registry sys tems\, and it will seek to comment on a number of paths forward in terms o f incremental reforms to Indigenous property systems as they are currently entrenched in Canadian law.\n\nAbout the speaker\n\n[En anglais seulement ] Dwight Newman is Professor of Law and Canada Research Chair in Indigenou s Rights in Constitutional and International Law at the University of Sask atchewan\, as well as a Senior Fellow at the Macdonald-Laurier Institute.  He is currently a Visiting Fellow at the Université de Montréal Faculté d e Droit and later this spring will be a Herbert Smith Visiting Fellow at t he Cambridge University Faculty of Law\, where he is carrying out work rel ated to his current SSHRC grant on “The Post-Tsilhqot’in Doctrine of Abori ginal Title”.  The paper he is presenting also builds to some degree on wo rk he carried out as a recent visitor at the Property and Environment Rese arch Center in Montana and as a recent Visiting Fellow in the James Madiso n Program at Princeton University.  Professor Newman has published widely and his writings have been cited in dozens of judicial decisions.\n DTSTART:20170327T170000Z DTEND:20170327T183000Z LOCATION:Salle de conférence Stephen Scott (OCDH 16)\, Chancellor Day Hall\ , CA\, QC\, Montreal\, H3A 1W9\, 3644 rue Peel SUMMARY:Indigenous Property\, the Doctrine of Aboriginal Title\, and Transc ending Imposed Barriers to Indigenous Economic Growth URL:/law/fr/channels/event/indigenous-property-doctrin e-aboriginal-title-and-transcending-imposed-barriers-indigenous-economic-2 66646 END:VEVENT END:VCALENDAR