96-2E
ABORIGINAL
SELF-GOVERNMENT
Prepared by:
Jill Wherrett
Political and Social Affairs Division
Revised 17 June 1999
TABLE
OF CONTENTS
ISSUE
DEFINITION
BACKGROUND
AND ANALYSIS
A.
Aboriginal Approaches to Self-Government
B.
The Evolution of Federal Policy
C.
Constitutional Change
D.
The Current Federal Approach
1.
Response to the Report of the Royal Commission on Aboriginal Peoples
2. Self-Government
Policy
3.
Manitoba Dismantling
4.
Sectoral Initiatives
E. Self-Government
Arrangements
1. James
Bay and Northern Quebec Agreement, Northeastern Quebec Agreement
2. Sechelt
Indian Band
3. Yukon
First Nations
4. Nunavut
5.
The Nisga'a Final Agreement
F. Other
Developments
1.
British Columbia Treaty Process
2.
Saskatchewan Treaty Commissioner
3.
International Issues
PARLIAMENTARY
ACTION
CHRONOLOGY
SELECTED
REFERENCES
ABORIGINAL SELF-GOVERNMENT
(1)
ISSUE
DEFINITION
Aboriginal self-government
has become a prominent issue in Canada over the past several decades.
While attention focused on constitutional reform in the 1980s and early
1990s, the agenda in recent years has shifted toward policy and legislative
changes. Significant developments in 1998-99 included the federal government
response to the Report of the Royal Commission on Aboriginal Peoples in
January 1998, the conclusion of the Nisgaa Final Agreement
in August 1998, and establishment of Nunavut in April 1999.
Aboriginal peoples
in Canada are defined in the Constitution Act, 1982 as Indians,
Inuit and Metis. The estimated Aboriginal population in 1999 is 1,377,900.
This figure includes 390,300 Status Indians on reserve, 284,500 Status
Indians off reserve, 426,800 Non-Status Indians, 61,000 Inuit and 215,300
Metis.(2)
BACKGROUND
AND ANALYSIS
A. Aboriginal
Approaches to Self-Government
Prior to contact
with Europeans, Aboriginal peoples relied on a variety of distinctive
ways to organize their political systems and institutions. Later, many
of these institutions were ignored or legally suppressed while the federal
government attempted to impose a uniform set of vastly different Euro-Canadian
political ideals on Aboriginal societies.
For many Aboriginal peoples,
self-government is seen as a way to regain control over the management
of matters that directly affect them and to preserve their cultural identities.
Self-government is referred to as an "inherent" right, a pre-existing
right rooted in Aboriginal peoples long occupation and government
of the land before European settlement. Many Aboriginal peoples speak
of sovereignty and self-government as responsibilities given to them by
the Creator and of a spiritual connection to the land. Aboriginal peoples
do not seek to be granted self-government by Canadian governments, but
rather to have Canadians recognize that Aboriginal governments existed
long before the arrival of Europeans and to establish the conditions that
would permit the revival of their governments. Treaty Indians often point
to treaties with the Crown as acknowledging the self-governing status
of Indian nations at the time of treaty signing.
In an effort to achieve
their self-government goals, Indian, Inuit and Métis groups have sought
constitutional, legislative and policy changes. For Status Indians a number
of initiatives have increased local control under the Indian Act
and allowed the negotiation of new legislative frameworks to replace that
Act. However, many First Nations maintain that any form of delegated authority
is inconsistent with an inherent right of self-government. Inuit have
pursued self-government through public government arrangements in the
north in conjunction with land claims, while the Métis have advanced various
claims for land and self-government.
Aboriginal peoples have
also drawn on the right of self-determination and international law to
support their claims. The developing body of international law on human
rights has focused much attention, in recent years, on the right to self-determination
as it applies to Aboriginal peoples. Aboriginal organizations have argued
that the inherent right of self-government is an aspect of the right of
self-determination recognized in the United Nations Charter and in the
Draft Declaration of the Rights of Indigenous Peoples.
B.
The Evolution of Federal Policy
In 1867, section
91(24) of the Constitution Act, 1867 gave the federal government
jurisdiction over Indians and lands reserved for the Indians. The first
Indian Act was enacted in 1876, consolidating existing laws regarding
Indians. A Supreme Court decision in 1939 also brought Inuit within federal
responsibility. Métis, with the exception of those living in Métis settlements
in Alberta, were not subject to special federal or provincial legislation.
Up to the 1950s, government
policies attempted to assimilate Aboriginal peoples into the larger non-Aboriginal
society. Indian band councils exercised limited, federally delegated power
to govern a land base within reserves and the primary decision-making
responsibility rested with the Minister of Indian Affairs and Northern
Development or with the Department. In the 1950s, the transfer of Indian
Affairs programs to bands, provinces and other federal agencies began.
The devolution of programs continues to the present day. In 1969, the
federal government issued its White Paper on Indian Policy, which essentially
proposed the termination of special status for Indians and the devolution
of services and programs to the provinces. Intense Indian opposition led
to the eventual withdrawal of the policy and mobilized national political
organization among Aboriginal peoples in Canada. While Aboriginal peoples
have asserted their rights to self-government since contact with Europeans,
the drive for Aboriginal self-government began during the 1970s to take
on greater force and coordination at the national level.
In 1982, a Special
Committee of the House of Commons on Indian Self-Government was appointed
to review legal and institutional issues related to the status, development
and responsibilities of band governments on reserves. Its 1983 report,
known as the Penner Report after Committee chair Keith Penner, recommended
that the federal government recognize First Nations as a distinct order
of government within the Canadian federation, and pursue processes leading
to self-government. It proposed constitutional entrenchment of self-government
and, in the short term, the introduction of legislation to facilitate
it.
The Penner Report presented
the basis for a significant departure from then current federal policies
regarding Indian bands. (It should be noted that the Committee examined
only Indian self-government, not self-government for all Aboriginal peoples.)
The report raised the profile of Aboriginal issues and had a significant
impact on the constitutional debate.
Over the next few years,
constitutional issues dominated discussions of Aboriginal self-government
(see below). In March 1985 the federal government adopted a "two-track"
approach to self-government. On one track were constitutional negotiations.
On the second track were community-based negotiations with Indian bands,
and a tripartite process between the federal government, provincial governments,
and Métis and Non-Status Indians. A cabinet minister was designated Interlocutor
for Non-Status Indians and Métis and was to serve as lead minister for
tripartite negotiations. In April 1986, the federal government
released its Policy on Community-Based Self-Government Negotiations. This
was an initiative to increase band control and decision-making and provide
more scope for community government than was possible under the Indian
Act, through legislated self-government agreements.
Another avenue for
developing self-governing arrangements was the process under which the
federal government, since 1973, has negotiated comprehensive land claims
settlements. Comprehensive claims are defined as claims based upon traditional
use and occupancy and unextinguished Aboriginal title (i.e., not dealt
with by treaty or "superseded by law"). According to the revised
statement of comprehensive claims policy in 1986, a new feature of the
policy was the possibility of negotiations on a broader range of self-government
matters. The 1986 policy statement explicitly provided, however, that
self-government arrangements negotiated through claims settlements would
not receive constitutional protection without a constitutional amendment
to that effect. This meant that the government preferred to negotiate
self-government arrangements separately from other matters in order to
avoid entrenchment under s. 35(3) of the Constitution Act, 1982.
Subsection 35(3) provides that the recognition and affirmation of existing
treaty rights in s. 35(1), includes "rights that now exist by way
of land claims agreements or may be so acquired." A number of agreements
have included a self-government component.
C.
Constitutional Change
The demands of Aboriginal
organizations led to the recognition and affirmation of existing Aboriginal
and treaty rights in the Constitution Act, 1982. Four constitutional
conferences were held between 1983 and 1987 to attempt to further define
those rights. The first amendments to the 1982 Constitution were agreed
to at the 1983 conference. They included recognition of rights arising
from land claims agreements and a commitment to include Aboriginal peoples
in constitutional conferences dealing with their rights. In the conferences
that followed, Aboriginal self-government emerged as the dominant issue.
However, in the absence of a clear understanding of the content of a right
to self-government, parties failed to reach an acceptable agreement.
Following the failure of
the 1987 First Ministers Conference on Aboriginal Rights to produce
a self-government agreement, governments turned their attention to the
broader constitutional agenda. In the process, Aboriginal peoples were
excluded from participation in the constitutional negotiations that led
to the 1987 Meech Lake Accord. This produced strong Aboriginal protests
that contributed to the Accords defeat in 1990. After much negotiation,
the provincial premiers, territorial government leaders, Aboriginal organizations
and the federal government agreed, as part of the 1992 Charlottetown Accord,
on amendments to the Constitution Act, 1982 that would have included
recognition of the inherent right of self-government for Aboriginal people.
For the first time, Aboriginal organizations had been full participants
in the talks; however, the Accord was rejected in a national referendum.
With regard to the Aboriginal provisions, concerns over the content of
self-government continued to be voiced. As well, not all members of the
Aboriginal community had approved of the negotiation process or the Accord
itself.
During the debates
leading up to and following the referendum of October 1995, Aboriginal
peoples raised issues related to their self-determination in the event
of Quebecs secession. The Crees of Quebec argued that no annexation
of them or their territory to an independent Quebec should take place
without their consent, and that if Quebec has the right to leave Canada
then the Cree people have the right to choose to keep their territory
in Canada. Following the referendum, Aboriginal groups asserted that they
must have a role in any future constitutional discussions.
D.
The Current Federal Approach
The current approach of
the federal government features both negotiations on comprehensive self-government
agreements with individual or groups of First Nations, and incremental
steps toward self-government through the transfer of authority or development
of more flexible arrangements in particular sectors, such as education
and First Nations financing.
1.
Response to the Report of the Royal Commission on Aboriginal Peoples
The Royal Commission on
Aboriginal Peoples released its final report on 21 November 1996.
Volume 2 of the five-volume report addressed governance issues. The Commission
set out an approach to self-government built on the recognition of Aboriginal
governments as one of three orders of government in Canada.
Among the recommendations,
the report called for both new legislation and bureaucratic reorganization
by the federal government. Recommendations included:
-
a new Royal
Proclamation to set out the principles for a new relationship and
outline new laws and institutions that would be established;
-
passage
of an Aboriginal Nations Recognition and Government Act;
-
elimination
of the Department of Indian Affairs and the position of Minister of
Indian Affairs;
-
establishment
of a new Cabinet position, the Minister for Aboriginal Relations,
and a new Department of Aboriginal Relations to negotiate and manage
agreements with Aboriginal nations. A Minister of Indian and Inuit
Services and a new Indian and Inuit services department would be responsible
for delivering services at the federal level;
-
passage
of an Aboriginal Parliament Act to establish a representative body
of Aboriginal peoples that would evolve into a House of First Peoples
and become a part of Parliament.
The federal government responded
to the report in January 1998 with Gathering Strength Canadas
Aboriginal Action Plan. This included a Statement of Reconciliation
expressing Canadas regret for past actions that had resulted in
damage to Aboriginal peoples and communities. It also set out an agenda
for the development of a new relationship between the federal government
and Aboriginal people. The agenda centres on four objectives: renewing
the partnership; strengthening Aboriginal governance; developing a new
fiscal relationship; and supporting strong communities, people and economies.
-
Gathering
Strength noted that the federal
government had recognized the right of self-government as an existing
inherent Aboriginal right within section 35 of the Constitution
Act, 1982, and outlined self-government processes that are ongoing.
-
With regard
to the Royal Commission recommendations calling for a restructuring
of federal institutions, the government responded that was "open
to further discussions on the departmental and institutional arrangements
that could improve existing systems."
-
With respect
to the recognition of Aboriginal governments, the federal government
said it would "consult with Aboriginal organizations and the
provinces and territories on appropriate instruments to recognize
Aboriginal governments and to provide a framework of principles to
guide jurisdictional and intergovernmental arrangements."
-
The government
intends to focus on capacity-building in the negotiation and implementation
of self-government. It is prepared to work with Aboriginal people
on the possible establishment of governance resource centres that
could help Aboriginal people develop models of governance, provide
guidance on best practices, and support capacity development in administrative
and financial management.
-
Gathering
Strength expressed the federal
governments willingness to work in partnership with Treaty First
Nations to achieve self-government within the context of the treaty
relationship, and to establish tripartite processes that link discussions
on treaties with governance, jurisdictional and fiscal negotiations.
The government is also prepared to consider the creation of additional
treaty commissions, similar to the Office of the Treaty Commission
in Saskatchewan.
2.
Self-Government Policy
With few prospects
for constitutional change following the 1992 referendum, the Liberal government
elected in 1993 committed itself to recognizing the inherent right of
self-government and implement it without reopening constitutional discussions.
In August 1995, the federal government formally announced its new policy.
Key principles of the policy are:
-
the inherent
right is an existing Aboriginal right under section 35 of the Constitution
Act, 1982.
-
self-government
will be exercised within the existing Canadian constitution.
-
the Canadian
Charter of Rights and Freedoms will apply to Aboriginal governments.
-
federal
funding for self-government will be achieved through the reallocation
of existing resources.
-
where all
parties agree, rights in self-government agreements may be protected
in new treaties under section 35 of the Constitution, as additions
to existing treaties, or as part of comprehensive land claims agreements.
-
laws of
overriding federal and provincial importance will prevail, and federal,
provincial, territorial and Aboriginal laws must work in harmony.
Under this policy, the range
of subjects that the federal government is willing to negotiate includes
matters internal to the group, integral to Aboriginal culture, and essential
to operating as a government or institution. Examples are the establishment
of government structures and internal constitutions; membership; marriage;
Aboriginal languages, culture and religion; education; health; social
services; policing; enforcement of Aboriginal laws; and others. In a number
of other areas, such as divorce, the administration of some justice issues,
gaming, and fisheries co-management, the federal government is prepared
to negotiate some measure of Aboriginal jurisdiction. A number of other
subject matters are not open to negotiation, however. These can be grouped
under two headings: 1) powers related to Canadian sovereignty, defence
and external relations; and 2) other national interest powers. Financing
self-government would be the shared responsibility of federal, provincial,
territorial and Aboriginal governments.
The Minister of Indian Affairs
has a mandate to enter into negotiations with First Nations, the Inuit,
and Métis groups in the north. The Federal Interlocutor for Métis and
Non-Status Indians has a mandate to enter into negotiations with Métis
south of the 60th parallel and Indian people who reside off a land base.
For groups without a land base, the government is prepared to consider
forms of public government, the devolution of programs and services, the
development of institutions providing services, and arrangements in those
subject matters where it is feasible to exercise authority in the absence
of a land base.
DIAND has reported that,
as of the fall of 1998, over 80 negotiations, involving over half of all
First Nation and Inuit communities, were in process.
3.
Manitoba Dismantling
In March 1994, the Minister
of Indian Affairs announced that DIANDs regional office in Manitoba
would be dismantled and its responsibilities transferred to the First
Nations of Manitoba. A memorandum of understanding was signed between
Canada and the Assembly of Manitoba Chiefs (AMC) in April 1994, and a
Framework Agreement to begin the process of dismantling was signed in
December 1994.
The Framework Agreement
sets out the process to dismantle DIAND operations, develop Manitoba First
Nations government institutions, and restore to Manitoba First Nations
governments the jurisdictions currently held by DIAND and other federal
departments. Discussions between the Assembly of Manitoba Chiefs and federal
officials on the details of the Framework Agreement began in April 1996.
Media reports state that the implementation of the initiative is taking
longer than originally anticipated, due to the complexity of negotiating
issues of jurisdiction and governance. An independent three-year review
of the process, required by the Agreement, was completed in early 1999.
4.
Sectoral Initiatives
Sectoral or incremental
initiatives have been developed in several areas. Examples include agreements
to transfer education jurisdictions and enhance First Nations authority
over reserve land management, and to provide for greater flexibility in
managing funding.
On 14 February 1997, the
Minister of Indian Affairs and Mikmaq Chiefs of Nova Scotia signed
a Final Agreement, with the involvement of the government of Nova Scotia,
to transfer legislative and administrative jurisdiction for Mikmaq
education to nine First Nations in Nova Scotia. The result of six years
of negotiations, the Final Agreement will lead to the transfer of $140
million for Mikmaq education to the Nova Scotia Mikmaq over
a five-year period. Federal legislation to implement the Agreement
received Royal Assent in June 1998.
In the area of land management,
chiefs of 13 First Nations from British Columbia, Alberta, Saskatchewan,
Manitoba and Ontario signed a Framework Agreement with the Minister of
Indian Affairs on 12 February 1996. A fourteenth First Nation joined at
a later date. The agreement is intended to give the First Nations control
over reserve lands and resources and end the discretion of the Minister
under the Indian Act over land management decisions on reserves.
Enabling legislation was passed in Parliament in June 1999.
In terms of First Nations
funding, the department has a pilot project with about 70 First Nations
to examine new financial transfer arrangements (FTAs). These are intended
to increase First Nations control, flexibility and accountability
over funding.
E.
Self-Government Arrangements
Over last two decades,
several self-government arrangements have been developed, both in conjunction
with land claim settlements and independent of them.
1.
James Bay and Northern Quebec Agreement, Northeastern Quebec Agreement
The Cree and Naskapi
First Nations of northern Quebec were the first Aboriginal groups to negotiate
self-government as part of their land claim agreements (the James Bay
and Northern Quebec Agreement and Northeastern Quebec Agreement) in 1975
and 1978. Provisions for local government were implemented in 1984 by
the Cree-Naskapi (of Quebec) Act, which replaced the Indian
Act for the Cree and Naskapi, and limited the responsibilities of
the federal government in the day-to-day administration of band affairs
and lands. All the Cree and Naskapi bands were incorporated and some of
their lands constitute municipalities or villages under the Quebec
Cities and Towns Act. Band corporations have by-law powers similar
to those possessed by local governments under provincial legislation.
The James Bay and Northern
Quebec Agreement also provided for a form of government for the Inuit
signatories. An Act concerning Northern villages and the Kativik Regional
Government (Kativik Act) established Inuit settlements in northern
Quebec as northern village municipalities under provincial legislation.
The Kativik Regional Government has the powers of a northern village municipality
over those parts of the territory that are not part of the village corporations,
and regional powers over the whole territory including the municipalities.
The governments are not ethnic in character -- all residents, Aboriginal
and non-Aboriginal, may vote, be elected and otherwise participate; however,
over 90% of the population in the area are Inuit and receive benefits
under the James Bay Agreement. The federal and Quebec governments have
been negotiating with Makivik Corporation, which represents the Inuit,
to further the self-government powers gained by the Inuit of Northern
Quebec under the James Bay Agreement.
2. Sechelt Indian
Band
In May 1986, the
Sechelt Indian Band Self-Government Act was passed after 15 years
of negotiation and consultation. This was a specific piece of legislation
that allowed the Sechelt Indian Band, located on the British Columbia
coast about 50 kilometres north of Vancouver, to move toward self-government.
The Act granted authority to the Sechelt band to exercise delegated powers
and negotiate agreements about specific issues. Under the legislation,
the community was set up as a legal entity with the power to enter into
contracts and agreements; acquire, sell and dispose of property; and spend,
invest and borrow money. The community was empowered to set up its own
constitution establishing its government, membership code, legislative
powers and system of financial accountability. The elected council has
the power to pass laws on a range of matters, including access to and
residence on Sechelt lands, administration and management of lands belonging
to the band, education, social welfare and health services, and local
taxation of reserve lands. The legislation transferred fee-simple title
of Sechelt lands to the band and contains a provision for the negotiation
of funding agreements in the form of grants or transfer payments administered
by the band council. The Sechelt Indian band has municipal status under
provincial legislation.
Some Aboriginal groups have
criticized the Sechelt model as municipal-type arrangement, governed by
provincial legislation. The Sechelt people contend that theirs is a unique
model, established in response to their particular situation, and not
intended to constrain other communities.
3. Yukon First Nations
The Council for Yukon First
Nations, the government of the Yukon and the federal government signed
an Umbrella Final Agreement (UFA) on 29 May 1993. The UFA established
the basis for the negotiation of final land claim settlements and self-government
agreements with each of the 14 Yukon First Nations. The UFA provides land,
cash compensation, wildlife harvesting rights, land and resource co-management,
and protection for the culture and heritage of Yukon Indians. It also
sets out the framework for individual Yukon First Nations Final Agreements,
which will incorporate the UFA and address the specific circumstances
of each First Nation.
Four First Nations, Vunut
Gwitchin, Nacho Nyak Dun, Champagne and Aishihik, and Teslin Tlingit,
signed individual land claim and self-government agreements in 1993, which
came into effect in 1995. Land claim and self-government agreements for
the Selkirk First Nation and Little Salmon/Carmacks First Nation were
concluded in July 1997 and came into effect in October of that year. On
16 July 1998, Trondëk Hwëchin First Nation became the seventh
Yukon First Nations to sign final land claims and self-government agreements.
Under the Yukon First
Nations Self-Government Act, these First Nations have law-making authority
over internal management of the First Nations; laws of a local or private
nature on settlement land in relation to matters such as land use and
control; hunting, trapping and fishing; the licensing and regulation of
businesses; and the taxation of interests in settlement land and other
modes of direct taxation of First Nations citizens on settlement land.
The First Nations have authority to enact laws for their citizens throughout
the Yukon in the areas of language, culture, health care, social and welfare
services, and education. First Nations constitutions provide for citizenship
codes; the powers, composition and procedures of governing bodies; financial
reporting systems; and procedures to protect the rights of citizens. Most
sections of the Indian Act cease to apply to the First Nations,
their citizens and their settlement lands. Five-year Financial Transfer
Agreements with the federal government provide funding for programs and
services.
On 16 April
1999, land claim and self-government agreements for the White River First
Nation were initialled. Agreements for the six remaining Yukon First Nations
are at various stages of negotiation.
4. Nunavut
For decades, Inuit of the
central and eastern Arctic have been calling for the creation of a new
territory. This effort took on added impetus in 1976 when the Inuit Tapirisat
of Canada submitted a proposal to the federal government requesting the
creation of a new territory to be called Nunavut ("our land"
in the Inuktitut dialect of the region). A 1982 plebiscite and several
years of negotiations followed. A key provision of the Tungavik Federation
of Nunavut land claim agreement, which was finalized in 1991, was the
creation of a new territory. The final agreement committed Canada, the
Government of the Northwest Territories, and the Tungavik Federation of
Nunavut to negotiate a political accord to deal with powers, financing
and timing for the establishment of the Nunavut government. This political
accord was formally signed in 1992. Inuit control through public government
is premised upon the existence of an Inuit majority in Nunavut. Currently,
85% of the population of the region is Inuit.
The Nunavut territory and
government was established on 1 April 1999. It has jurisdictional powers
and institutions similar to those of the government of the NWT. On
15 February 1999, residents of Nunavut held their first election for members
of their Legislative Assembly. Paul Okalik was selected as the territorys
first premier.
5.
The Nisga'a Final Agreement
On 4 August 1998, representatives
of the Nisgaa Tribal Council, the federal government, and
the government of British Columbia initialled the Nisgaa
Final Agreement. The Agreement is intended to settle the land claim of
the Nisgaa Nation, located in B.C.s Nass Valley. It
includes provisions related to land, resources, financial compensation
and governance. Under the Agreement, the Nisgaa have a central
government (Nisgaa Lisims Government) and four village governments,
similar to local government arrangements, all of whose structures, duties
and functions are spelled out in the Nisgaa constitution.
The Agreement provides for Nisgaa law-making powers over
matters such as culture and language, public works, regulation of traffic
and transportation, land use, and solemnization of marriages. The Nisgaa
would continue to provide health, child welfare, and education services
under existing arrangements, but could also choose to make laws in these
areas. All Nisgaa law making powers would be concurrent with
those of Canada and British Columbia. Under the Agreement, powers related
to solemnization of marriages, social services, and adoption apply to
Nisgaa people throughout the province, with their consent.
The Agreement also provides that people residing on Nisgaa
Lands who are not Nisgaa citizens will be consulted about
and may seek a review of decisions that directly and significantly affect
them and can participate in elected bodies that directly and significantly
affect them.
The Agreement has been ratified
by the Nisgaa Nation and the British Columbia Legislature.
Federal legislation to ratify the agreement is expected to be introduced
in Parliament in the fall of 1999.
Various other land claim
and self-government negotiations are currently ongoing.
-
The chiefs
of the United Anishnaabeg Councils, which represents eight First Nations
in south central Ontario, and the Minister of Indian Affairs signed
an Agreement-in-Principle on Anishnaabe Government on 21 June 1998.
-
On 14 October
1998, the Deline Land/Financial Corporation Ltd. and the Deline Dene
Band, the Northwest Territories government and the federal government
signed an agreement on process and schedule for self-government negotiations.
-
On 26 November
1998, leaders of the Anishinabek Nation in Ontario signed a framework
agreement with the federal government to negotiate Aboriginal governance
for the Anishinabek Nation.
-
On 10 May
1999, representatives of the Government of Newfoundland and Labrador,
the federal government, and the Labrador Inuit Association (LIA) initialled
the Labrador Inuit Land Claims Agreement in Principle.
-
On 18 May
1999, the Micmac Nation of Gespeg, the Quebec government, and the
federal government signed a framework agreement for negotiating self-government
for the Micmac Nation of Gespeg.
F.
Other Developments
1.
British Columbia Treaty Process
On 1 March 1996,
the British Columbia Treaty Commission Act formally establishing
the B.C. Treaty Commission came into effect, as did the provincial
Treaty Commission Act and a resolution of the B.C. First Nations Summit.
As of 23 April 1999, 51 First Nations, of the 197 in British Columbia,
were active in the B.C. Treaty Commission process. On 16 April 1999, representatives
of the governments of Canada and British Columbia and the Sechelt Indian
Band signed an Agreement-in-Principle, the first in the British Columbia
Treaty Commission process.
2.
Saskatchewan Treaty Commissioner
In December 1996, the Office
of the Treaty Commissioner of Saskatchewan was re-established to facilitate
self-government negotiations and to assist with exploratory discussions
on treaty issues. This expanded the mandate of the Office, which was created
in 1989. Saskatchewan judge David Arnot was appointed to a five-year term
as Treaty Commissioner.
3.
International Issues
A Draft Declaration
on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples was completed in 1994 after 12 years
of negotiations between governments and indigenous groups. In August 1995,
the U.N. Economic and Social Council passed a resolution to establish
a working group at the U.N. Human Rights Commission to further elaborate
the draft document. Canada is included in this group. Aboriginal organizations
have criticized the Canadian government for attempting to water down Aboriginal
rights to self-determination in the document. The aim of the Human Rights
Commission is to elaborate further on the Draft Declaration for its consideration
and adoption by the U.N. General Assembly within the International Decade
of the Worlds Indigenous People, which ends in 2004. During an
April 1999 session of the Human Rights Commission, delegates discussed
the possible establishment of a permanent forum for indigenous peoples
within the UN system.
PARLIAMENTARY
ACTION
1984 - Cree-Naskapi (of
Quebec) Act was passed by Parliament, implementing a chapter of the
James Bay and Northern Quebec Agreement.
1985 - An Act to amend
the Indian Act was passed by Parliament granting Indian band councils
new by-law powers over band membership, reserve residence and alcohol
regulation.
1986 - Parliament passed
the Sechelt Indian Band Self-Government Act, providing for the
first Indian self-government legislation independent of a land claims
agreement.
1988 - An Act to amend
the Indian Act (designated lands) granted Indian band councils clear
powers to levy local taxes on Indians and non-Indian reserve residents.
1993 - The Nunavut Act
and the Nunavut Land Claims Agreement Act were given Royal Assent,
the final step towards the creation of a new territory.
1994 - Bill C-34, the Yukon
First Nations Self-Government Act received Royal Assent on 7 July
1994.
1995 - Bill C-107, the British
Columbia Treaty Commission Act, was introduced to Parliament on 18 October.
The bill received Royal Assent on 1 December.
1998 - Bill C-39, an Act
to amend the Nunavut Act and the Constitution Act, 1867, received Royal
Assent on 6 July.
1999 - Bill C-49, First
Nations Land Management Act, was approved by Parliament.
CHRONOLOGY
1763 - The Royal Proclamation
recognized the rights of the "several Nations or Tribes of Indians
... who live under our protection."
1867 - Legislative authority
with respect to "Indians, and Lands reserved for the Indians"
assigned to Parliament at Confederation.
1876 - First consolidated
Indian Act.
1951 - Last major revision
of the Indian Act.
1969 - The federal government
issued its White Paper on Indian Policy, proposing termination of special
Status. The Paper was withdrawn due to Indian opposition.
1975 - James Bay and Northern
Quebec Agreement signed.
17 April 1982 - Constitution
Act, 1982, s. 35 affirmed and recognized the existing Aboriginal and
treaty rights of the Aboriginal people of Canada.
14-16 March 1983 - First
Ministers Conference on Aboriginal Constitutional Matters. Agreement
was reached on a constitutional amendment specifying that "existing
treaty rights" in s. 35 includes existing and future land claims
settlements.
3 November 1983 - Report
of the Special Committee on Indian Self-Government.
June 1984 - Passage of the
Cree-Naskapi (of Quebec) Act.
9 October 1986 - The Sechelt
Indian Self-Government Act, S.C. 1986, c. 2, received Royal Assent.
August 1991 - The federal
government appointed a Royal Commission on Aboriginal Peoples.
August 1992 - An agreement
on constitutional reform was reached in Charlottetown; it would have entrenched
the inherent right of Aboriginal peoples to self-government in the Constitution
Act, 1982.
October 1992 - The Charlottetown
Accord was rejected in a national plebiscite.
7 July 1994 - Bill C-34,
the Yukon First Nations Self-Government Act, was granted Royal
Assent.
7 December 1994 - The Minister
of Indian Affairs and Northern Development and the Grand Chief of the
Assembly of Manitoba Chiefs signed a Framework Agreement setting out the
process for dismantling DIAND regional operations in Manitoba and permitting
negotiations to transfer jurisdiction in various areas to First Nations
control.
10 August 1995 - The federal
government formally launched a new process for negotiating Aboriginal
self-government, based on the recognition of the inherent right self-government
as a right under the Constitution.
3 May 1996 - Education Agreement-in-Principle
signed by Minister of Indian Affairs and Mikmaq Chiefs from Nova
Scotia.
21 June 1996 - National
Aboriginal Day declared by Minister of Indian Affairs Ron Irwin.
21 November 1996 - Release
of the final report of the Royal Commission on Aboriginal Peoples.
7 January 1998 - Federal
response to the report of the Royal Commission on Aboriginal Peoples.
4 August 1998 - The Nisgaa
Final Agreement was initialled.
SELECTED
REFERENCES
Cameron, K. and G. White.
Northern Governments in Transition: Political and Constitutional Developments
in the Yukon, Nunavut and the Western Northwest Territories.
The Institute for Research on Public Policy, Montreal, 1995.
Canada, Department of Indian
Affairs and Northern Development. Federal Policy Guide, Aboriginal
Self-Government: The Government of Canadas Approach to the Implementation
of the Inherent Right and the Negotiation of Aboriginal Self-Government.
Minister of Indian Affairs and Northern Development, Ottawa, 1995.
Canada. House of Commons
Special Committee on Indian Self-Government. Second Report: Indian
Self-Government in Canada. 1st Session, 32nd Parliament, Issue No.
40.
Doerr, A. "Building
New Orders of Government the Future of Aboriginal Self-Government."
Canadian Public Administration, Vol. 40, No. 2, Summer 1997.
Grand Council of the Crees
(of Quebec). Sovereign Injustice: Forcible Inclusion of the James Bay
Crees and Cree Territory into a Sovereign Quebec. Grand Council of
the Crees, Nemaska, Quebec, 1995.
Green, Joyce. "Constitutionalising
the Patriarchy: Aboriginal Women and Aboriginal Government." 4 Constitutional
Forum 110, Summer 1993.
Hamilton, A.C. A New
Partnership: Report of the Honourable A.C. Hamilton, Fact Finder.
Minister of Indian Affairs and Northern Development, Ottawa, 1995.
Hogg, P. and M.E. Turpel.
"Implementing Aboriginal Self-Government: Constitutional and Jurisdictional
Issues." The Canadian Bar Review. Vol. 74, No. 2, June 1995,
p. 187-224.
Peters, E., ed. Aboriginal
Self-Government in Urban Areas. Institute of Intergovernmental Relations,
Queens University, Kingston, 1995.
Royal Commission on Aboriginal
Peoples, Aboriginal Self-Government: Legal and Constitutional Issues.
Royal Commission on Aboriginal Peoples, Ottawa, 1995.
Royal Commission on Aboriginal
Peoples. Report of the Royal Commission on Aboriginal Peoples: Volume
2. Restructuring the Relationship. Canada Communications Group, Ottawa,
1996.
(1)
This paper replaces an earlier text (Current Issue Review 89-5) with the
same title.
(2)
Department of Indian Affairs and Northern Development, 1999-2000 Estimates,
Part III Report on Plans and Priorities, p. 11.
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