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Distributed for University of British Columbia Press

Indigenous Law in Context

Tsilhqot’in Dechen Ts’edilhtan in the Governance of Water

Bridges Indigenous and Canadian legal systems through the lens of Tsilhqot’in water governance to explore law, tradition, and sustainable resource management.

Exploring the challenge of reconciling Indigenous and non-Indigenous legal systems through the lens of water governance in Tsilhqot’in traditional territory in British Columbia, Indigenous Law in Context offers an in-depth analysis of law, tradition, and resource management.

The Tsilhqot’in Nation governs its lands according to dechen ts'edilhtan, the laws of their ancestors, yet in Canada, Indigenous law is often misunderstood, disregarded, or invisible to non-Indigenous authorities. Alan Hanna investigates how this legal order applies to the sustainable use and access of surface water, examining the intersections and points of conflict among Indigenous, provincial, and federal law. Drawing on oral traditions and knowledge from Elders collected over years of interviews, Hanna provides an in-depth analysis of Indigenous decision-making processes in the management of a vital resource.

This careful study aims to bridge seemingly incompatible worldviews, fostering dialogue on how Indigenous law—and specifically Indigenous water law—can be meaningfully applied to contemporary governance and twenty-first-century challenges.

220 pages | 6 x 9 | © 2026

Law and Society

Economics and Business: Economics--Agriculture and Natural Resources

Law and Legal Studies: General Legal Studies

Native American and Indigenous Studies


Reviews

"An engaging and timely work, Indigenous Law in Context makes a significant contribution to this rapidly developing field. The way in which interviews with Elders and community members are woven through the book, in particular, gives life and grounded meaning to the theoretical ideas. This thorough and sensitive scholarship is a great benefit to the study of Indigenous law."

Carwyn Jones, lead academic in Maori laws and philosophy, Te Wananga o Raukawa

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