The Potential Impact of Indigenous Rights on the International Law of Nationality

International law has long recognized that the power of a state to identify its nationals is a central attribute of sovereignty and firmly within the purview of domestic law. Yet these boundaries may be shifting, in part due to the effect of international human rights norms. In 2011, citizenship sch...

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Main Author: Kirsty Gover
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Cambridge University Press 2021-01-01
Series:AJIL Unbound
Online Access:https://www.cambridge.org/core/product/identifier/S2398772321000088/type/journal_article
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author Kirsty Gover
author_facet Kirsty Gover
author_sort Kirsty Gover
collection DOAJ
description International law has long recognized that the power of a state to identify its nationals is a central attribute of sovereignty and firmly within the purview of domestic law. Yet these boundaries may be shifting, in part due to the effect of international human rights norms. In 2011, citizenship scholar Peter Spiro asked, “[w]ill international law colonize th[is] last bastion of sovereign discretion?” Ten years later, this essay reframes the question, asking whether the international law of Indigenous Peoples’ rights will “decolonize” the discretion, by encouraging its exercise in ways that respect and enable Indigenous connections to their traditional land. It considers this possibility in light of two recent cases decided by courts in Australia and Canada, both of which ascribe a distinctive legal status to non-citizen Indigenous persons: Love v. Commonwealth, Thoms v Commonwealth (“Love-Thoms,” Australian High Court) and R. v. Desautel (“Desautel,” British Columbia Court of Appeal, currently on appeal before the Supreme Court of Canada). In each case, the court in question recognized that some Indigenous non-citizens have constitutional rights to remain within the state's territory (and perhaps also a correlative right to enter it), by virtue of their pre-contact ancestral ties to land within the state's borders.
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spelling doaj.art-3fa4c8ca8f2249ccb20cfeebdf55e5752023-03-09T12:27:09ZengCambridge University PressAJIL Unbound2398-77232021-01-0111513513910.1017/aju.2021.8The Potential Impact of Indigenous Rights on the International Law of NationalityKirsty Gover0Professor and Associate Dean (Indigenous Recognition), Melbourne Law School, Melbourne, Australia.International law has long recognized that the power of a state to identify its nationals is a central attribute of sovereignty and firmly within the purview of domestic law. Yet these boundaries may be shifting, in part due to the effect of international human rights norms. In 2011, citizenship scholar Peter Spiro asked, “[w]ill international law colonize th[is] last bastion of sovereign discretion?” Ten years later, this essay reframes the question, asking whether the international law of Indigenous Peoples’ rights will “decolonize” the discretion, by encouraging its exercise in ways that respect and enable Indigenous connections to their traditional land. It considers this possibility in light of two recent cases decided by courts in Australia and Canada, both of which ascribe a distinctive legal status to non-citizen Indigenous persons: Love v. Commonwealth, Thoms v Commonwealth (“Love-Thoms,” Australian High Court) and R. v. Desautel (“Desautel,” British Columbia Court of Appeal, currently on appeal before the Supreme Court of Canada). In each case, the court in question recognized that some Indigenous non-citizens have constitutional rights to remain within the state's territory (and perhaps also a correlative right to enter it), by virtue of their pre-contact ancestral ties to land within the state's borders.https://www.cambridge.org/core/product/identifier/S2398772321000088/type/journal_article
spellingShingle Kirsty Gover
The Potential Impact of Indigenous Rights on the International Law of Nationality
AJIL Unbound
title The Potential Impact of Indigenous Rights on the International Law of Nationality
title_full The Potential Impact of Indigenous Rights on the International Law of Nationality
title_fullStr The Potential Impact of Indigenous Rights on the International Law of Nationality
title_full_unstemmed The Potential Impact of Indigenous Rights on the International Law of Nationality
title_short The Potential Impact of Indigenous Rights on the International Law of Nationality
title_sort potential impact of indigenous rights on the international law of nationality
url https://www.cambridge.org/core/product/identifier/S2398772321000088/type/journal_article
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