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(En)gendering Shoreline Law: Nishnaabeg Relational Politics Along the Trent Severn Waterway

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  • Madeline Whetung

Abstract

This article examines the colonization of Michi Saagiig Nishnaabeg territory by the Trent Severn Waterway. By examining legal bracketing as a process within Canadian common law alongside prevailing Nishnaabeg philosophy and legal thought, I consider how the construction of a canal system connecting Lake Ontario to Georgian Bay disrupted practices integral to Nishnaabeg law. I offer up the concept of shoreline law as a way to understand particular place-based relationships that Mississaugas hold with water and land and other beings with which they share territory. In particular, I show how colonial domination of Nishnaabeg territory resulted in a gendered dispossession of land that continues to have reverberations throughout Nishnaabeg political systems today. Shoreline law offers up a way to rethink international relations by showing the importance of multiple relationships within the shared space of the shoreline.

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  • Madeline Whetung, 2019. "(En)gendering Shoreline Law: Nishnaabeg Relational Politics Along the Trent Severn Waterway," Global Environmental Politics, MIT Press, vol. 19(3), pages 16-32, August.
  • Handle: RePEc:tpr:glenvp:v:19:y:2019:i:3:p:16-32
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    1. Cristina Yumie Aoki Inoue, 2018. "Worlding the Study of Global Environmental Politics in the Anthropocene: Indigenous Voices from the Amazon," Global Environmental Politics, MIT Press, vol. 18(4), pages 25-42, November.
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