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Gehl v Canada : challenging sex discrimination in the Indian Act

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    Publisher:
    University of Regina Press, 2021
    Note: Alberta Municipal Affairs' Public Library Services Branch

Details:

  • Author: Gehl, Lynn
    Date:
    Created
    2021
    Summary:

    A follow-up to Claiming Anishinaabe, Gehl v Canada is the story of Lynn Gehl's lifelong journey of survival against the nation-state's constant genocidal assault against her existence. While Canada set up its colonial powers-including the Supreme Court, House of Commons, Senate Chamber, and the Residences of the Prime Minister and Governor General-on her traditional Algonquin territory, usurping the riches and resources of the land, she was pushed to the margins, exiled to a life of poverty in Toronto's inner-city.With only beads in her pocket, Gehl spent her entire life fighting back, and now offers an insider analysis of Indian Act litigation, the narrow remedies the court imposes, and of obfuscating parliamentary discourse, as well as an important critique of the methodology of legal positivism. Drawing on social identity and Indigenous theories, the author presents Disenfranchised Spirit Theory, revealing insights into the identity struggles facing Indigenous Peoples to this day.

    Original Publisher: [Calgary, Alberta], University of Regina Press
    Language(s): English
    ISBN: 9780889778283
    Collection(s)/Series: Prairie Indigenous Ebook Collection