Reclaiming Anishinaabe Law

Kinamaadiwin Inaakonigewin and the Treaty Right to Education

By Leo Baskatawang
Foreword by Jim Daschuk
Categories: Law & Legal Studies, Indigenous Peoples & Colonial Law
Publisher: University of Manitoba Press
Paperback : 9781772840254, 240 pages, April 2023
Ebook (EPUB) : 9781772840261, 224 pages, March 2023
Ebook (PDF) : 9781772840278, 224 pages, March 2023
Hardcover : 9781772840285, 224 pages, March 2023

Table of contents

Introduction
Chapter 1 Colonization and Other Political Discontents
Chapter 2 Indigenous Laws and the State
Chapter 3 Kinamaadiwin Inaakonigewin
Chapter 4 Reconciliation as Recognition and Affirmation
Reflections

Description

A manifesto for the future of Indigenous Education in Canada

 

In Reclaiming Anishinaabe Law Leo Baskatawang traces the history of the neglected treaty relationship between the Crown and the Anishinaabe Nation in Treaty #3, and the Canadian government’s egregious failings to administer effective education policy for Indigenous youth—failures epitomized by, but not limited to, the horrors of the residential school system.

 

Rooted in the belief that Indigenous education should be governed and administered by Indigenous peoples, Baskatawang envisions a hopeful future for Indigenous nations where their traditional laws are formally recognized and affirmed by the governments of Canada. Baskatawang thereby details the efforts being made in Treaty #3 territory to revitalize and codify the Anishinaabe education law, kinamaadiwin inaakonigewin. Kinamaadiwin inaakonigewin considers education wholistically, such that it describes ways of knowing, being, doing, relating, and connecting to the land that are grounded in tradition, while also positioning its learners for success in life, both on and off the reserve.

 

As the backbone of an Indigenous-led education system, kinamaadiwin inaakonigewin enacts Anishinaabe self-determination, and has the potential to bring about cultural resurgence, language revitalization, and a new era of Crown-Indigenous relations in Canada. Reclaiming Anishinaabe Law challenges policy makers to push beyond apologies and performative politics, and to engage in meaningful reconciliation practices by recognizing and affirming the laws that the Anishinaabeg have always used to govern themselves.