TextThe provision provides that:
Aboriginal rightsAboriginal rights protect the activities, practice, and traditions of the aboriginal peoples in Canada that are integral to the distinctive culture of aboriginal peoples. The word "existing" in section 35(1) has created the need for the Supreme Court to define what Aboriginal rights "exist". The Supreme Court ruled in R. v. Sparrow that, before 1982 (when section 35 came into effect), Aboriginal rights existed by virtue of the common law. Common law could be changed by legislation. Therefore, before 1982, the federal Parliament could extinguish Aboriginal rights, whereas now it can no longer extinguish any rights that still existed in 1982. Honour of the CrownAs part of the historical relationship between them, any time the government is interacting with aboriginal the honour of the crown is said to be at stake. This principle of the "honour of the crown" imposes a number of duties upon the government. Flowing from the honour principle is a duty on the Crown to consult with aboriginals in any industry activities. This duty was first described in the decisions of Haida v. British Columbia, [2004] 2 S.C.R. 511 and Taku River Tlingit First Nation v. British Columbia, [2004] 3 S.C.R. 550. The duty is engaged when "the Province has knowledge, real or constructive, of the potential existence of Aboriginal right or title and contemplates conduct that might adversely affect them."2 The determination of such a duty depend both on the strength of the right that is being encroached upon as well as the negative impact and gravity of the government's conduct. Not a Charter rightThe section in the Charter that most directly relates to Aboriginals is section 25. It merely states that Charter rights do not diminish Aboriginal rights; it is therefore not as important as section 35.3 The Charter forms Part I of the Constitution Act, 1982 while section 35 is placed in Part II. This placement in the Constitution is considered significant. Professor Kent McNeil has written it could be seen as meaning section 35 allows for Aboriginal self-government, while the Charter is concerned with more individual rights.4 Professor Peter Hogg has argued there are negative and positive effects of excluding section 35 from the Charter. Section 35 cannot be limited by section 1 or the notwithstanding clause. However, section 24 of the Charter, which allows remedies for rights violations, is not available to section 35. Moreover, in R. v. Sparrow the Court developed a test to limit section 35 that Hogg has compared to the section 1 Oakes test.5 Despite this, professors F.L. Morton and Rainer Knopff, in their criticisms of Charter case law and growing judicial discretion, treat section 35 as if it were part of the Charter. They write that "Section 35 is technically 'outside' of the Charter, but as a declaration of the special rights of Canada's most salient racial minority- rights that are enforceable in the courts- it has become an important part of the Charter revolution."6 Footnotes
External linksWatch two documentaries on Constitutional Conferences on Aboriginal Rights. [1] [2]
| |