Unstable Properties

Aboriginal Title and the Claim of British Columbia

By Patricia Burke Wood & David Rossiter
Categories: Indigenous Studies, History, Canadian History, Geography, Human Geography, Regional & Cultural Studies, Canadian Studies, Historical Geography
Publisher: UBC Press
Hardcover : 9780774866200, 312 pages, October 2022
Ebook (PDF) : 9780774866293, 312 pages, October 2022
Ebook (EPUB) : 9780774866347, 312 pages, October 2022
Paperback : 9780774866255, 312 pages, June 2023

Table of contents

Introduction: Paper Claims

1 The Invention of British Columbia

2 Calder, Churn, and Destabilization: 1973–97

3 Unsettled in the Wake of Delgamuukw

4 The Politics of Refusal and the End of the Political Path, 2004–14

5 Property, Territory, Sovereignty, and Citizenship

Conclusion: Reconciliation and Reimagining British Columbia

References; Index

Description

The so-called land question dominates political discourse in British Columbia. Unstable Properties reverses the usual approach – investigating Aboriginal claims to Crown land – to reframe the issue as a history of Crown attempts to solidify claims to Indigenous territory. From the historical-geographic processes through which the BC polity became entrenched in its present territory to key events of the twenty-first century, the authors highlight the unstable ideological foundation of land and title arrangements. In the process, they demonstrate that only by understanding diverse interpretations of sovereignty, governance, territory, and property can we move toward meaningful reconciliation.

Awards

  • Short-listed, Lieutenant Governor’s Historical Writing Awards 2023