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DISENTANGLING THE SOURCES AND NATURE OF INDIGENOUS RIGHTS: A CRITICAL EXAMINATION OF COMMON LAW JURISPRUDENCE
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 26 October 2012
Abstract
The ‘indigenous renaissance’ of the last few decades continues to generate copious litigation around the Commonwealth. While courts frequently invoke common principles, it would be going too far to say that a unified jurisprudence exists. Moreover, modern jurisprudence in this area is arguably inconsistent and frequently discriminatory, which means that borrowing across jurisdictions should proceed cautiously, mindful of localized nuances and limitations. This article argues that any suggestion that the common law as it has evolved in any particular jurisdiction should be emulated as a model indigenous rights theory must be rigorously scrutinized, for indiscriminate application of doctrines could lead to discordant outcomes.
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References
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8 From Cooper v Stuart (1889) App Cas 286 to Milirrpum v Nabalco Party Ltd (1971) 17 Fed LR 141.
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25 Mickenberg (n 10).
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52 Slattery, Ancestral Lands (n 10).
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54 In Thomas v A-G of Guyana GY 2009 HC 7 (HC of Guyana, 30 April 2009), Chang CJ held that since neither Imperial power (the Dutch or the British) gave ‘de jure recognition’ to any system of indigenous customary law, no customary rights or interests exist in the present.
55 For a penetrating discussion of the Indian cases see McNeil, Common Law Aboriginal Title (n 26) 165–71.
56 ibid chap 7.
57 Côté (n 35) 172–3.
58 See also G Lester and G Parker, ‘Land Rights: The Australian Aborigines Have Lost a Legal Battle, But…’ (1973)
11 AltaLRev 196.
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60 Guerin (n 35).
61 Côté (n 35).
62 Mabo (n 3) per Toohey J [99]–[120].
63 Delgamuukw (n 4) 1082.
64 This at least is how these principles have been applied in Australia: Yorta Yorta v Victoria (2002) 194 ALR 538.
65 Milirrpum (n 8).
66 See notes 90 to 96 and accompanying text.
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74 Gilbert (n 1) 592–4.
75 [1996] 2 SCR 507.
76 Gilbert (n 1) 591–2.
77 Fejo v Northern Territory (1998) 156 ALR 721.
78 ibid 739.
79 Per Gleeson CJ and Gaudron, McHugh, Gummow, Hayne and Callinan JJ, ibid 739.
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81 Attorney General for the Isle of Man v Mylchreest (1879) 4 App Cas 294; and for a detailed account of the common law on this issue see McNeil, K, ‘Racial Discrimination and Unilateral Extinguishment of Native Title’ (1996) 1 AILR 192–6Google Scholar.
82 In Mabo Brennan J described native title as a proprietary right: (n 3) 36.
84 Mabo (n 3) 153; Note, there is even a passage in the judgment of Brennan J (48) that can be construed in support of this position.
85 R v Sparrow [1990] 1 SCR 1075.
86 Van der Peet (n 75).
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91 Yorta Yorta (n 64) 553.
92 ibid 552.
93 Mykyta, S, ‘Losing Sight of the Big Picture: The Narrowing of Native Title in Australia’ (2004–05) 36 OttawaLRev 11Google Scholar 1.
94 Mabo (n 3) 42; This ruling has been reinforced by the Federal Native Title Act 1993 (Cth), section 223(1) of which defines ‘native title’ by reference to traditional laws and customs of Australian Aboriginal peoples. This provision has been strictly construed by the Australian High Court as requiring primary focus on those laws and customs: Western Australia v Ward (2002) 191 ALR 16–17 and Yorta Yorta (n 63) 549.
95 Aurelio Cal et al v Attorney-General of Belize (2007) 71 WIR 110.
96 Stuckey, M, ‘Not by Discovery But by Conquest: The Use of History and the Meaning of “Justice” in Australian Native Title Cases’ (2005) 34 CLWR 24CrossRefGoogle Scholar; For a critique of the trial judge's approach, and a more detailed discussion of the complexities of the requirement related to traditional laws and customs and how this has bedevilled Australian jurisprudence, see K McNeil, ‘The Relevance of Traditional Laws and Customs to the Existence and Content of Native Title at Common Law’ in K McNeil (ed), Emerging Justice?: Essays on Indigenous Rights in Canada and Australia (University of Saskatchewan Native Law Centre 2001) 416; see also Bartlett, R, ‘An Obsession With Traditional Laws and Customs Creates Difficulty Establishing Native Title Claims in the South: Yorta Yorta’ (2003) 31 UWA L Rev 35Google Scholar and Reilly, A, ‘The Ghost of Truganini: Use of Historical Evidence as Proof of Native Title’ (2000) 28 FLRev 462–4Google Scholar.
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99 Mykyta (n 93) 121–2.
100 Stuckey (n 96) 28.
101 Anker (n 97) 26.
102 Gilbert (n 1) 592.
103 In none of the cases from any of the jurisdictions discussed here is there any doubt that indigenous rights to land (if they exist in the first place) may be statutorily abrogated. As the discussion in this section shows, what contention there is exists in relation to the required standard to successfully achieve such abrogation.
104 (n 11) 588.
105 U.S. v Santa Fe Pacific Railroad 314 US 339 (1941) and Sobhuza II v Miller [1926] AC 518, 525; See also Lysyk, K, ‘The Indian Title Question in Canada: An Appraisal in the Light of Calder’ (1973) 51 CanBarRev 475–6Google Scholar and Bartlett, R, ‘The Aboriginal Land Which May be Claimed at Common Law: Implications of Mabo’ (1992) 22 UWA L Rev 294Google Scholar.
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107 See, for example, Chippewas of Sarnia Band v Attorney-General of Canada [2001] 1 CNLR 56, which sanctioned what McNeil has dubbed ‘extinguishment by judicial discretion’: K McNeil, ‘Extinguishment of Aboriginal Title in Canada: Treaties, Legislation and Judicial Discretion’ (2001–02) 33 OttawaLRev 301.
108 Mabo (n 3) 46.
109 ibid 50.
110 In Australia land grants were initially made by Prerogative grant, and it was not until 1842 that the management and sale of land was first brought under statutory control: Wik Peoples v Queensland (1996) 141 ALR 129, 171.
111 As Brennan J himself did: (n 3) at 36.
112 A-G v Nissan [1970] AC 179, 213 (Lord Reid).
113 Magna Carta, 1215, 17 John, cl. 39; See also 1 Bl Comm 134–5; Main v Stark [1890] App Cas 384; Slattery (n 29) 748.
114 Santa Fe (n 105).
115 ibid 346.
116 ibid 354.
118 Smokehouse (n 88) 712.
119 Delgamuukw v British Columbia (1993) 104 DLR (4th) 470, 523 (McFarlane J).
120 In Gladstone v The Queen [1996] 2 SCR 723 Lamer CJC offered unhelpfully at 750: ‘While to extinguish an aboriginal right the Crown does not, perhaps, have to use language which refers expressly to its extinguishment of aboriginal rights, it must demonstrate more than that, in the past, the exercise of an aboriginal right has been subject to a regulatory scheme.’
121 Mabo (n 3) 46 (Brennan J).
122 ibid.
123 ibid 49.
124 ibid 51.
125 Oyekan v Adele [1957] 2 All ER 785, 788. See also Amodu Tijani v Southern Nigeria [1921] 2 AC 399; Sunmonu v Disu Raphael [1927] AC 881; Bakare Ajakaiye [1929] AC 881; Oshodi v Dakolo [1930] AC 667.
126 Per Deane and Gaudron JJ, (n 3) 67.
127 A.G. of Quebec v A.G. of Canada [1921] 1 AC 401 at 408; Canadian Pacific Ltd. v Paul [1988] 2 SCR 654, 677; Delgamuukw (n 4) 1081–2.
128 Mabo (n 3) 62–4.
129 In Re Southern Rhodesia [1919] AC 211, when finding against the survival of native rights, Lord Sumner for the Privy Council infamously categorized aboriginal peoples according to Western conceptions of development, which in turn determined whether their rights could be recognized.
130 Mabo (n 3) 67.
131 For a succinct account of this aspect of Australia's history see M Cocker, Rivers of Blood, Rivers of Gold (Grove Press 1988) 115–84.
132 (n 3) 83.
133 McNeil, Racial Discrimination (n 81); N Pearson, ‘204 Years of Invisible Title’ in MA Stephenson and S Ratnapala (eds), Mabo: A Judicial Revolution (University of Queensland Press 1993) 75; L Strelein, ‘Conceptualising Native Title’ [2001] 23 SydLR 95; M Tehan, ‘A Hope Disillusioned, An Opportunity Lost? Reflections on Common Law Native Title and Ten Years of the Native Title Act’ (2003) 27 MelbLRev 523.
134 Wik (n 110).
135 Ward (n 94).
136 ibid 170–95.
137 For a valuable exploration of this issue see Schiveley, GR, ‘Negotiation and Native Title: Why Common Law Courts are not Proper Fora for Determining Native Land Title Issues’ [2000] 33 VandJTransnatlL 427Google Scholar.
138 (n 117).
139 DV Williams, ‘Customary Rights and Crown Claims: Calder and Aboriginal Title in Aotearoa New Zealand’ in H Foster, H Raven and J Webber (eds), Let Right Be Done: Aboriginal Title, the Calder Case, and the Future of Indigenous Rights (UBC Press 2007) 171.
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141 In the US it has been advanced as a reason explaining the patently erroneous decision in Tee-Hit-Ton Indians v US 348 US 272 (1955), see Mickenberg (n 10); as regards Australia Kent McNeil has suggested that pragmatism could account for the misapplication of the common law in relation to the principles of extinguishment crafted by the High Court: ‘The Vulnerability of Indigenous Rights in Australia and Canada’ (2004) 42 OsgoodeHallLJ 297–301; and in relation to Canada see Donovan, Brian ‘The Evolution and Present Status of Common Law Aboriginal Title in Canada: The Law's Crooked Path and the Hollow Promise of Delgamuukw’ (2001) 35 UBCLRev 43Google Scholar.
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146 ibid 69.
148 Notable among them are the Human Rights Committee and the CERD (Convention on the Elimination of All Forms of Racial Discrimination) Committee.
149 See, e.g. CERD Committee, Decision 1(66): New Zealand Foreshore and Seabed Act 2004 (11 March 2005), para 7; CERD Committee, Concluding Observations: Guyana (4 April 2006) CERD/C/GUY/CO/14.
150 CERD Committee, Decision 1(68): United States of America (11 April 2006).
151 Cal (n 95) [118]–[34].
152 See, eg, Mary and Carrie Dann v US Case No. 11.140 (IACHR 15 Oct 2001); Yakye Axa Indigenous Community v Paraguay Series C no 125 (Inter-Am Ct HR 17 Jun 2005); Moiwana Village v Suriname Series C no 145 (Inter-Am Ct HR 8 Feb 2006); Sawhoyamaxa Indigenous Community v Paraguay Series C no 146 (Inter-Am Ct HR 29 Mar 2006); and Saramaka Peoples v Suriname Series C no 172 (Inter-Am Ct HR 28 Nov 2007).
153 BJ Richardson, S Imai and K McNeil, ‘Indigenous Peoples and the Law–Historical, Comparative and Contextual Issues’ in Indigenous Peoples and the Law (n 98) 11–12.
154 Alvarado, LJ, ‘Prospects and Challenges in the Implementation of Indigenous Peoples' Human Rights in International Law: Lessons from the Case of Awas Tingni v Nicaragua’ (2007) 24 ArizJIntl&CompL 609Google Scholar.
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