Introduction: Decolonizing Law in the Global North and South: Expanding the Circle S. Xavier and J. Hewitt Section 1: Challenging Limitations of Settler Colonialism 1. Decolonizing Anishnaabe nibi inaakonigewin and gikendaasowin Research: Reinscribing Anishnaabe Approaches to Law and Knowledge A. Craft, D. McGregor, R. Seymour & S. Chiblow 2. Statehood, Canadian Sovereignty, and the Attempted Domestication of Indigenous Legal Relations A. Bhatia 3. Decolonization in Third and Fourth Worlds: Synergy, Solidarity and Sustainability through International Law Usha Natarajan Section 2: Perspectives from the Global North & South Part I – International 4. Mastery and Gratitude: Development Aid & The Colonial Condition in Palestine Reem Bahdi & Mudar Kassis 5. Rethinking International Legal Education in Latin America (REDIAL): exploring some obstacles of a hegemonic colonial academic model in Chile and Colombia P. Acosta Alvarado, A. Álvez Marín, L. Betancur-Restrepo, E. Prieto-Ríos, D. Rivas-Ramírez & F. Veçoso Part II – Sites of Engagement 6. Indigenous Peoples and Belo Monte Hydroelectric Plant: The mobilization of displaced Indigenous people in the urban area of Altamira Estella Libardi de Souza & Assis da Costa Oliveira 7. Unearthing (De)colonial Legal Relations: Mining Law in Aotearoa New Zealand Estair Van Wagner & Maria Bargh 8. Comparative Law and Epistemnologies of Ignorance in Chilean Constitutional Adjudication: A Case Study Amaya Alvez, Tatsuhiko Inatani & Marta Infantino 9. Not Empty of Laws: Indigenous Legal Orders and the Canadian State Mary Eberts 10. The right to free, prior, and informed consent (FPIC): Reflections on experiences of two Indigenous communities in northern regions of Canada and Chile Terry Mitchell, Courtney Arseneau, José Aylwin Oyarzún & Darren Thomas Section 3: Decolonizing Through Indigenous Worldviews 11. Decolonizing Corrections Beverley Jacobs, Yvonne Johnson and Joey Twins 12. (Re)bundling nêhiyaw âskiy: nêhiyaw constitutionalism through land stories Darcy Lindberg 13. Conducting Research from an Indigenous Lens Valarie Waboose