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New book by 91亚色 geographer rethinks concept of land claims in B.C.

In her latest book, 91亚色鈥檚 Patricia Wood, a professor in the Faculty of Environmental and Urban Change, questions the ideologies that surround land and title arrangements in British Columbia.

Unstable Properties book cover


Faculty

Patricia Wilson, Faculty of Environmental and Urban Change

The book, titled Unstable Properties: Aboriginal Title and the Claim of British Columbia, was co-written with 91亚色 alumnus David Rossiter, a professor at Western Washington University. 

Wood and Rossiter鈥檚 book reframes the issue of land claims as historical attempts by the Crown in B.C. to acquire Indigenous territory.

In a Q&A with graduate student researcher Danielle Legault, Wood talks about her new book.

Patricia Wilson, Faculty of Environmental and Urban Change
Patricia Wilson, Faculty of Environmental and Urban Change 

Q: How does this book build on your previous research work, and what inspired you to write it?

A: David Rossiter and I have been researching the historical, political and legal geography of Indigenous title in B.C. for about 20 years. It started with a project on the referendum that the provincial government, under (former) Premier Gordon Campbell, held in 2002 about the 鈥減rinciples鈥 of treaty negotiations. That became our first published article together, in The Canadian Geographer, in 2005. Several more articles, presentations and op-ed pieces followed on specific aspects, but there was a larger story that we wanted to tell that needed a book-length manuscript to
do properly.

Q: What inspired your choice of British Columbia as the site of exploration in this book?

A: British Columbia is an important site of Indigenous-settler relations because the vast majority of the territory the Crown claimed was never 鈥渃onquered鈥 nor ceded by treaty. The Crown鈥檚 claim, even according to its own law, is without solid moral or legal foundation. It is thus inherently unstable.

Q: Can you discuss the unique approach of Unstable Properties in reframing the topic of Aboriginal claims to Crown land?

A: We would emphasize that the question is one of Crown claims on Indigenous land, not the other way around. This is at the heart of our approach. It has always been the Indigenous claim that is subjected to scrutiny, as a 鈥渂urden鈥 on the Crown claim. This is backwards; it is the legitimacy of the Crown鈥檚 claim that needs to be examined. It is Canada that needs to reconcile its actual history and present with its alleged principles of democracy and justice.

We also want to emphasize that what progress has been made on resolving these questions and moving forward towards a more just relationship should be credited to Indigenous individuals and organizations who did the political and legal work to compel the Canadian state to 鈥 start to 鈥 recognize the hypocrisy, injustice and violence of settler-colonial land claims.

Our argument about the instability of the settler claim to Indigenous land in British Columbia isn鈥檛 intended to suggest British Columbia is exceptional and everywhere else is fine, but rather that it exposes the problems of settler-colonial claims across Canada, and should lead us to question what existing treaties mean, under what circumstances they were established, and what kind of relationship we want to pursue from here.

Research is not politically neutral, and a lot of talk about 鈥渞econciliation鈥 can be pretty superficial. We鈥檙e trying to contribute to a path that is more meaningful and material, where Indigenous sovereignty and land rights are part of the plan. Facing our history and decolonizing our thinking is not just in our publications; bringing this to the curriculum and the classroom is just as important.

Q: Having completed this book, how do you see your work moving forward in the future?

A: We know we still have miles to go, and Dave and I plan to continue to pay attention to specific cases that Indigenous organizations raise to see where we can help with research that exposes the instability of the settler claim, in hopes that it helps pressure settler governments to come to the table and negotiate honestly and fairly.