2 April 2015
This scoping workshop brought together scholars
working on theories of indigenous law, to
explore the range of potential doctrinal,
theoretical, and philosophical issues that are
fundamental to understanding indigenous law(s)
and indigenous-state legal interactions. These
range from abstract issues of sovereignty,
concepts of law, justice, governance and rights,
to more specific doctrinal challenges in fields
such as family law, property law, criminal law
and environmental law; from procedural questions
around dispute resolution, access, language and
choice of law, to connections with other
‘pluralist’ legal orders including
international, transnational, religious or
customary law.
This scoping workshop explored and laid the
foundations for a large-scale collaborative work
in this emerging field, and consider the
methodological challenges and guiding questions
for a research agenda in philosophy of
indigenous law.
Discussants
John Borrows (University of Victoria)
Claire Charters (University of Auckland)
Kirsty Gover (University of Melbourne)
Nicole Roughan (National University of
Singapore)
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Programme Schedule |