Aboriginal Title definition
Examples of Aboriginal Title in a sentence
The Court is not able, in the context of these proceedings, to make a declaration of Tsilhqot’in Aboriginal Title.
The FNLC is not an Aboriginal Title and Rights or Treaty Rights holder and cannot engage in processes to establish and provide free, prior and informed consent on behalf of individual First Nations.
The FNLC mandate includes working together to improve the socio‐economic conditions of First Nations in British Columbia, and to advance recognition and reconciliation of pre‐existing Aboriginal Title and Rights, and Treaty Rights, with the assertion of Crown sovereignty.
The Corporation agrees to transfer to the State the right pursuant to s 20 of the Act to occupy, use, control and manage the whole of any land which is the subject of a grant of fee simple of Aboriginal Title pursuant to clause 4.3, subject to the conditions in s 20 of the Act on the State’s dealings with such land.
The Haida territory consists of Haida Gwaii and surrounding waters; and The Haida Nation therefore holds Hereditary title as well as Aboriginal Title and Rights and Responsibilities for the well-being of Haida territory, people and culture.
The negotiations will be based upon recognition of Tahltan Aboriginal Title and Rights in Tahltan Territory and, as applicable, the implementation of the Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples Act, the Draft Principles that Guide the Province of British Columbia’s Relationship with Indigenous Peoples released on May 22, 2018, the Calls to Action of the Truth and Reconciliation Commission, and the Supreme Court of Canada’s decision in Tsilhqot’in Nation v.
The Farm Kranspoort 2000 (2) SA 124 (LCC)(Court found that the community’s use and enjoyment rights constituted beneficial occupation and that they had been dispossessed thereof.) 5 See ▇▇ ▇▇▇▇▇▇▇ & ▇▇ ▇▇▇▇▇▇ ‘Restoring the Land: The Claims of Aboriginal Title, Customary Law and the Right to Culture’ (2005) 16 Stellenbosch LR 431-45 (The authors investigate and ultimately reject the right to culture as a basis for the institution of land claims.
Any failure to understand Aboriginal Title can only lie in the hearts and minds of men and women in the colonial government.