less than 1 minute read

Excerpt:

  “Aboriginal interest in land generally is described as a tribe’s right to occupy the land.  It is not a property right, but “amounts to a right of occupancy which the sovereign grants and protects against the interests of third parties.”  That right, which is residual in nature, comes from the legal theory that discovery and conquest gave the conquerors the right to own the land but did not disturb the tribe’s right to occupy it. “  Id., at 1015.  (Emphasis added.)

SUGGESTED CITATION

Indigenous Values Initiative, "White v. Univ. of Cal.," Doctrine of Discovery Project (27 August 2018), https://doctrineofdiscovery.org/white-v-univ-of-cal/.

Donate today!

Open Access educational resources cost money to produce. Please join the growing number of people supporting The Doctrine of Discovery so we can sustain this work. Please give today.