Between Justice and Certainty - Treaty Making in British Columbia placeholder

Between Justice and Certainty

Treaty Making in British Columbia

By Andrew Woolford
Categories: Political Science, Law & Legal Studies, Indigenous Peoples & Colonial Law, Indigenous Studies
Publisher: UBC Press
Hardcover : 9780774811316, 240 pages, February 2005
Paperback : 9780774811323, 240 pages, January 2006
Ebook (PDF) : 9780774851633, 240 pages, January 2006

Table of contents

Preface and Acknowledgments

1 Introduction

2 Between the Procedure and Substance of Justice

3 The Imposition of Colonial Visions of Justice

4 First Nations Justice Frames

5 The British Columbia Treaty Process

6 Visions of Justice

7 Visions of Certainty

8 Conclusion

Notes

References

Description

Since the BC treaty process was established in 1992, two discourses have become prominent within the treaty negotiations. The first, a discourse of justice, asks how we can remedy the past injustices imposed on BC First Nations. The second, a discourse of certainty, asks whether historical repair can occur in a manner that provides a better future for all British Columbians. Andrew Woolford examines the interplay between Aboriginal and non-Aboriginal visions of justice and certainty to determine whether there is a space between the two concepts in which modern treaties can be made. He suggests that greater attention to justice is necessary if we are to initiate a process of reconciliation.

Reviews

This book is destined to become a standard text for university courses dealing with First Nations issues, but, equally important, it should be required reading for politicians, negotiators, and policy makers involved in the B.C. treaty process. Between Justice and Certainty: Treaty Making in British Columbia will inform all those who seek a deeper understanding of why treaty making and reconciliation must begin with facing our history. For as Woolford argues so persuasively, our failure to do this will create neither certainty nor justice in indigenous-settler relations in British Columbia in the twenty-first century.

- Paulette Regan

[T]his argument is very well made. Between Justice and Certainty is strongest in its presentation of a sociology of knowledge and meaning. Woolford’s work clearly demonstrates the profound gulf between Aboriginal and non-Aboriginal parties at the negotiating table – and that these disjunctures are simultaneously masked and intensified by the very procedures that were designed to bridge these distances.

- Nathan Young