Aboriginal Self-Government

  • Royal Proclamation

    Royal Proclamation
    -Issued by British King in 1763 after the 7 Year War which France ended
    -France had ceded (given) the territories in North American to Britain as part of the peace deal
    -The king drew a line along the Appalachian mountains and designed everything west of the mountains as native territory
    -Designation forbade colonists from settling there, which angered the european settlers
    -Explicitly stated that natives owned "all lands not ceded by or purchased from them"
  • Indian Act

    Indian Act
    -Passed in 1876
    -Governs how Canada and the Canadian gov't interacts with native people
    -Gives the government control over almost all aspects of native's lives
    -Limits the power of "Band Councils" and forbids them from reserving land
    -It was unilaterally imposed, as opposed to being negotiated
    -The act was used to try and assimilate native people into Canadian society
    -Set up residential schools to teach native kids the Canadian way of life
    -Is seen as discrimination by many Canadians
  • Assembly of the First Nations

    Assembly of the First Nations
    -After First World War, League of Indians in Canada founded by a Mohawk veteran, Fred Ogilvie Loft
    -Became antecedent of Federation of Saskatchewan Indian Nations and Indian Association of Alberta
    -1926 - Indian Defence League of America formed by Chief Clinton Rickard of the Tuscarora Nation
    -Heavy involvement in US-Canada border crossing problems faced by "Indians" in both countries
    -Rickard organized an annual celebration to assert border crossing rights
  • Ipperwash Ontario

    Ipperwash Ontario
    -Was Indigenous land, dispute that took place in Ipperwash, Provincial Park, Ontario in 1995
    -Several members of Stoney Point Ojibway band occupied park in order to assert their claim to nearby land which had been expropriated from them during WW2
    -During violent confrontation, Ontario Provincial Police (OPP) killed protester Dudley George
    -George was unarmed and an OPP officer fired and killed Dudley George, believing the flashlight he had was a weapon
  • Aboriginal Right to Universal Suffrage

    Aboriginal Right to Universal Suffrage
    -Gave native people the right to vote in Canadian elections
    -Universal suffrage defined as everyone having the right to vote, not just certain groups based on race, religion or gender (this term still often excluded minors)
    -Passed at around the same time as the Canadian bill of rights, which stated that all Canadians have equal rights
    -Bill of rights was strong evidence that native people should get the right to vote
    -Until now they were considered wards of the state, like foster kids
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    National Indian Brotherhood and Native Council of Canada

    -Formed in 1961 to represent the interests of Canada's native people
    -Collapsed in 1967 since the Status, Non Statues Natives and Metis couldn't work together
    -Metis and Non Status Indians formed the Native Council of Canada
    -Status Indians formed the National Indian Brotherhood
    -Both groups still had the same goal, to represent and advance the interest of native Canadians
  • Abolishment of Residential School System

    Abolishment of Residential School System
    -Residential schools were formally abolished in 1969, and all such institutions were placed under the administration of the Department of Indian Affairs, as opposed to that of the catholic Church
    -Although ownership changed hands, the conditions at the schools didn't
    -Despite the clear indications that the schools were not working, and did more harm than good, it took many more years before schools actually started to close
    -Last residential school only closed in 1996, almost 3 decades later
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    White Paper

    -Was a policy proposed by PM Trudeau and the Minister of Indian Affairs
    -Was meant to abolish the Indian Act, which many saw as discriminatory
    -Would also remove the legal status of "Indian" from Canadian law, which was part of Trudeau's plan to increase equality
    -However, most native band leaders opposed the policy proposal, and after a year it was withdrawn
    -The Natives saw it as more of an assimilation attempt seeking to remove their special status then as a sincere equality measure
  • Specific Land Claim

    Specific Land Claim
    -Specific clams deal with past grievances of First Nations related to Canada's obligations under historic treaties or the way it managed First Nations' fund or other assets
    -To honor its obligations, Canada negotiates settlements w/ First Nation and (where applicable) provincial and/or territorial gov't
  • Comprehensive Land Claims

    Comprehensive Land Claims
    -Comprehensive land claims deal with the unfinished business of treaty-making in Canada
    -Claims generally arised in areas of Canada where Aboriginal land rights haven't been death with by treaty or through other legal means
  • Movement Towards Self Gov't

    Movement Towards Self Gov't
    -Proposal to give gov't representing Canada's native peoples greater powers, ranging from powers equal to those of municipal gov'ts, to demands to be considered sovereign states
    -No bands were granted status of sovereign states, some granted varying degrees of power as a result of their negotiations with federal/provincial gov't
    -Drive for self gov't stems from the idea that this land belongs to the natives, and that it is occupied by settlers, who impose laws upon them
  • Passing of Bill C-31

    Passing of Bill C-31
    Three Principles that guided the amendments to the Indian Act were:
    -Removal of discrimination
    -Restoring status and membership rights
    -Increasing control of Indian bands over their own affairs
    -In addition to bringing the Indian Act into accord with the equality provisions of the Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms
    -bill C-31 expanded band control over membership and community life -enabling Indian people to take an important step toward self-gov't
  • Oka Standoff

    Oka Standoff
    -Land dispute between group of Mohawk people and town of Oka
    -Surete du Quebec Corporal Marcel Lemay was killed by a bullet, rumours circulated that the reason no source had been determined was that it had been a police bullet and the Lemay had been conducting an internal investigation which was connecting the death of two Mohawk men to SQ guns
    -The dispute was the first well-publicized violent conflict between First Nations and the Canadian gov't
  • Gustafasen Lake, BC

    Gustafasen Lake, BC
    -Confrontation between the Royal Canadian Mounted Police and the Ts'peten Defenders in the interior of BC, Canada at Gustafsen Lake
    -RCMP operation would end up being the most costly of its kind in Canadian history having involved 400 police officers and support from the Canadian Military
    -Predominantly indigenous occupiers believed that the "grazing rights privilege" ranch land on which they stood was both sacred space and part of a larger tract of Shuswap territory
  • Delgamuukw Case

    Delgamuukw Case
    -Aboriginal title is the idea that the land in Canada is owned by the native people, and illegally occupied by the white settler's defendants
    -The supreme court defined Aboriginal title and what requirements had to be met in order for the natives to claims sovereignty over that land
    The requirements were:
    -"Must have occupied the territory before the declaration of sovereignty"
    -Must prove continued occupation between the declaration of sovereignty and before it
  • Statement of Reconciliation

    Statement of Reconciliation
    -The Canadian gov't issued a "Statement of reconciliation" continued within a document entitled Gathering Strength - Canada's Aboriginal Action Plan
    -Made a # of recommendations to the gov't of Canada regarding residential schools
    -Canada consequently made a Statement of Reconciliation to residential school survivor in 1998 and created the Aboriginal Healing Foundation
  • Nisga's Treaty

    Nisga's Treaty
    -Between the Nisga's FNs and the BC gov't
    -2000 square KM of reserve land was created in the Nass River Valley
    -300,000 square KM of water reserve was also created
    -Gave the natives control of the land's rich fishing logging industries
    -Was the 1st formal treaty signed between natives and the BC gov't in over a century
  • Creation of Nunavut

    Creation of Nunavut
    -Map of Canada changed
    -Former Northwest Territories (NWT) divided into two
    -Creating new territory called Nunavut
    -Inuit language, Inuktitut, word "Nunavut" means our land