The issue of Native Sovereignty
Title: The issue of Native Sovereignty
Category: /Science & Technology
Details: Words: 1266 | Pages: 5 (approximately 235 words/page)
The issue of Native Sovereignty
Category: /Science & Technology
Details: Words: 1266 | Pages: 5 (approximately 235 words/page)
In the following assignment, I will discuss the issue of native sovereignty in Canada, and address the question; “Can native sovereignty coexist with Canadian sovereignty?” To answer this question I will summarize two articles that discuss the issue. The first by John A. Olthius and Roger Townshend entitled “The Case for Native Sovereignty”, and the second, by Thomas Flanagan, entitled “Native Sovereignty: Does Anyone Really want an Aboriginal Archipelago?” I will be taking the position
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remains to be seen whether native and non-native Canadians can come to an agreement on the definition of sovereignty.
Bibliography
Bibliography
Olthius, John A. and Townshend, Roger. “The case for Native sovereignty”. In Crosscurrents: Contemporary Political Issues, 3rd ed. ed. Mark Charlton and Paul Barker, 5-8. Toronto: Nelson, 1998.
Flanagan, Thomas. “Native sovereignty: Does Anyone Really want an Aboriginal Archipelago?”. In Crosscurrents: Contemporary Political Issues, 3rd ed. ed. Mark Charlton and Paul Barker, 9-15. Toronto: Nelson, 1998.