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Distributed for University of British Columbia Press

Unstable Properties

Aboriginal Title and the Claim of British Columbia

A clear-eyed study that dissects the unstable ideologies of settler-Indigenous land and title arrangements in British Columbia.

The question of land dominates political discourse in British Columbia. Unstable Properties upends the usual approach—investigating Aboriginal claims to Crown land—to reframe the issue as attempts by the Crown to solidify claims to Indigenous territory.

First Nations political and intellectual leadership has exposed the fragility of British Columbia’s property regimes, insisting that the province grapples with diverse interpretations of sovereignty, governance, territory, and property.

From British Columbia’s historical-geographic processes to key events of the twenty-first century, Unstable Properties incisively exposes the unstable ideological foundation of land and title arrangements, employing critical human geography to educate readers about settler colonialism.


256 pages | 1 map | 6 x 9 | © 2022

Geography: Cultural and Historical Geography

History: General History

Native American Studies


Reviews

“One task of Reconciliation is to learn the true history of the relationships between settlers, Indigenous peoples, colonialism, and the land. This book makes an important in-road toward that goal.”

Alan Hanna, University of Victoria

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