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Decolonizing Law: Indigenous, Third World and Settler Perspectives
Decolonizing law? Everyone wants to decolonize something, at some point!
Building bridges, connecting communities
Organization and themes of the collection
Challenging limitations of settler colonialism
Decolonizing Anishinaabe nibi inaakonigewin and gikendaasowin research: reinscribing Anishinaabe approaches to law and knowledge
Statehood, Canadian sovereignty, and the attempted domestication of Indigenous legal relations
Decolonization in Third and Fourth Worlds: synergy, solidarity, and sustainability through international law
Perspectives from the Global North and South
International
Mastery and gratitude: development aid and the colonial condition in Palestine
Rethinking international legal education in Latin America: exploring some obstacles of a hegemonic colonial academic model in Chile and Colombia
Sites of engagement
Indigenous peoples and Belo Monte Hydroelectric Plant: the mobilization of displaced Indigenous peoples in the urban area of Altamira
Unearthing (de)colonial legal relations: mining law in Aotearoa New Zealand
Comparative law and epistemologies of ignorance in Chilean constitutional adjudication: a case study
Not empty of laws: Indigenous legal orders and the Canadian state
The right to free, prior, and informed consent (FPIC): reflections on experiences of two Indigenous communities in northern regions of Canada and Chile
Decolonizing through Indigenous worldviews
Decolonizing corrections
(Re)bundling nêhiyaw âskiy: nêhiyaw constitutionalism through land stories
Conducting research from an Indigenous lens
Notes on contributors
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