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A Common Hunger: Land Rights in Canada and South Africa: List of Maps & Acknowledgements

A Common Hunger: Land Rights in Canada and South Africa
List of Maps & Acknowledgements
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table of contents
  1. Cover
  2. Half Title Page
  3. Title Page
  4. Copyright Page
  5. Dedication
  6. Contents
  7. Preface
  8. Maps
  9. List of Illustrations
  10. List of Maps & Acknowledgements
  11. ☉ INTRODUCTION
    1. Canada and South Africa
    2. Aboriginal Rights and International Law
    3. The Clearing of Lands and Languages
  12. Part One ☉ Dispossession
    1. [1] ☉ THE LAND AND THE PEOPLE
      1. The First Peoples of the Cape of Good Hope
      2. The First Peoples of North America
      3. Slavery in New France and the Cape Colony
      4. British North America
      5. The Cape under British Rule
      6. Frontier Societies
      7. Conclusion
    2. [2] ☉ LAND RIGHTS AND TREATIES
      1. Introduction
      2. Canadian Treaties
      3. Treaties in Colonial South Africa
      4. Discussion: Strategies of Land Alienation
      5. Conclusion
    3. [3] ☉ SOVEREIGNTY AND SEGREGATION
      1. Introduction
      2. Sovereignty and Constitutional Rights in Canada
      3. Assimilation in Twentieth-Century Canada
      4. Sovereignty in South Africa
      5. Pragmatic Segregation in South Africa
      6. Ideological Segregation: Apartheid South Africa
      7. The Struggle for Sovereignty in South Africa
      8. Challenging the Concept of Sovereignty in Canada
      9. Conclusion
  13. Part Two ☉ Reclaiming the Land
    1. [4] ☉ LITIGATION
      1. Introduction
      2. Aboriginal Rights Court Cases in Canada
      3. The Gitxsan and Wet’suwet’en of British Columbia
      4. Delgamuukw v. British Columbia: The Supreme Court Decision (1997)
      5. Aboriginal Litigation in South Africa
      6. The Richtersveld Case: Background
      7. The Richtersveld Community v. Alexkor Ltd. & the Government of the RSA (2000)
      8. Conclusion
    2. [5] ☉ NEGOTIATING RESTITUTION
      1. Introduction
      2. Reclaiming the Land in South Africa
      3. The Restitution Process in South Africa
      4. Challenges to Restitution in South Africa
      5. Case Study: The Mogopa Community, North West Province
      6. Rebuilding Communities
      7. The Conservation Factor
      8. The Case of Kosi Bay, Maputaland (KwaZulu-Natal)
      9. Negotiating Land Restitution in Canada
      10. The Lubicon Cree, Alberta
      11. The B.C. Treaty Commission
      12. Conclusion
    3. [6] ☉ SELF-GOVERNMENT
      1. Restoring Sovereignty
      2. Negotiating Self-Government in Canada
      3. The Sechelt Agreement
      4. The Inuit Peoples of the Northwest Territories
      5. The Nunavut Land Claim
      6. Reversing “Self Government” in the Former Bantustans
      7. Conclusion
  14. Part Three ☉ Dealing with Legacies
    1. [7] ☉ RESTORING DIGNITY
      1. The Hunger for Dignity
      2. Legacies of Dispossession in Canada
      3. Legacies of Dispossession in South Africa
      4. The Problem of “Invisibility”
      5. Land Matters: Restoring Dignity
      6. Conclusion
    2. [8] ☉ RECONCILIATION
      1. The Purpose of Public Inquiries
      2. Canada’s Royal Commission on Aboriginal Peoples (1991–96)
      3. Critiquing the RCAP Process
      4. South Africa’s Truth and Reconciliation Commission (1996–98)
      5. Critiquing the TRC
      6. Reparations
      7. Uncovering the Truth
      8. Conclusion
  15. ☉ CONCLUSION
    1. Why Land Rights Matter
    2. The Task of Nation-building in South Africa
    3. The Power of Stories (Canada)
  16. ☉ APPENDIX
  17. Notes
  18. Bibliography
  19. Index
  20. Africa: Missing Voices Series
  21. Back Cover

LIST OF MAPS

1South Africa’s Former Bantustans.

2South Africa’s Provinces, 1994.

3Canada’s Major Claim Areas.

4Canada’s Provinces.

ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS

I am grateful for this opportunity to recognize and thank all those who contributed in special ways to this book. My mentors were the friends and colleagues who shared their knowledge and passion with me: Cornelius Jaenen, Olive Dickason, Poppie Rabalao, Al Cook, Peter Carstens, Peter Colenbrander and Rodney Davenport. Others who inspired and assisted me in various ways along the journey were: Margaret Back, Bob Acton, Douglas and Mary Anglin, Patricia Kennedy, Dariusz Ciach and Wilma MacDonald in Ottawa; Mary Miliano and Peter and Christine Fensham in Australia; Jenny Bean and Kirstin Brown in New Zealand; and François and Molly Bill, Jacob Tshabangu, Kamseela Govender, Henk Smith and Willem Louw in South Africa. Thanks as well to Nancy Mucklow in Kingston for her skillful editing and belief in the importance of this book.

My family and friends, who have shown their support in many different ways, made this project possible. I want to thank my husband, Ian Fairweather especially for his constant support and valuable assistance. My final word of appreciation goes to Jean Wilson, who took an interest in this book from its inception and is truly its “godmother.”

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A Common Hunger
© 2006 by Joan G. Fairweather.
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