• VagabondSpectre
    1.9k
    The Trudeau government has been quietly orchestrating a massive overhaul of the relationship between Canadian governments and First Nation communities in an effort to address the many social problems that disproportionately afflict them. The situation of First Nation peoples in Canada, and their relationship with the Canadian government, has been unique, storied, and marked by a string of failures extending from the turn of the 19th century until today. The goal of Trudeau's overhaul is not only to improve the social outcomes in First nations communities, but also to formally transfer the means and rights required for indigenous groups to enact full self-governance and political autonomy - sovereignty - which will allow them to rebuild and repair the cultural losses they have suffered in the past. For historical, legal, and cultural reasons, the Canadian government believes it owes a significant debt to First Nations groups, and may be preparing to transfer vast amounts of land and resources, for the first time, to the direct control of indigenous groups for the repayment of that debt. I wonder: what the legal and ethical implications, and outcomes, of attempting to do so will actually be?

    A Brief History of Developments

    Reveal
    Canada wasn't settled by conquest like America was. The French got along well with the indigenous groups they met, and when Britain colonized Canada they conquered the existing French and made agreements and treaties with various native groups (though some indigenous groups did fight along side the French in many instances). King George III's royal proclamation of 1763 established British governmental jurisdiction in the North American territories won from France, and it also made reservations for the rights and lands of indigenous people:

    "And whereas it is just and reasonable, and essential to our Interest, and the Security of our Colonies, that the several Nations or Tribes of Indians with whom We are connected, and who live under our Protection, should not be molested or disturbed in the Possession of such Parts of Our Dominions and Territories as, not having been ceded to or purchased by Us, are reserved to them, or any of them, as their Hunting Grounds. "

    This is the beginning of the (then British) legal-constitutional basis for the sovereignty of First Nation peoples. As the European population in Canada grew, subsequent Acts were implemented to standardize and mediate issues such as the requirements to be considered an "Indian" and the circumstances under which "Indians" could sell land to individuals or the government. Additionally, Acts were also passed which began to seek assimilation or "enfranchisement" of Indians to bring them into a European lifestyle as a British subject at the cost of land and culture. At this time (circa 1860) many indigenous groups had existing treaties and agreements with the government, but these agreements were neutered by the culmination of the Indian Act of 1876, which more or less mandated direct Canadian governmental control of indigenous communities (Canada having been formed 11 years prior, this was a formalization of older legislation and an affirmation of the intent to assimilate indigenous peoples).

    Religious "residential schools" had existed in the territories since the mid 1800's, but in the 1880's and onward they were a ubiquitous as standardized tools of assimilation. "Kill the Indian in the child" by separating them from their families, language, and culture, and by forcing upon them Christianity and a new language, was the intention. The conditions of these residential schools were extremely poor; death from disease/malnutrition was common, physical and sexual abuse was rampant which also resulted in many deaths, and many schools operated on the "half-work day" model (physical labour to pay for the school) with the other half being spent learning about religion and the denigration of their own culture. By 1940 the Canadian government (and people) more or less knew that the residential schools were destroying people instead of assimilating them, and initiated reform to begin closing them, and by the 60's most had been shut down.

    In 1969, prime-minister Pierre Elliot Trudeau released a proposal for the total disintegration of any special status or legal disparities between Canadian citizens and First Nations individuals and groups. Essentially, papa Trudeau argued that Indian status amounted to discriminatory practice as such laws did not apply to other Canadians, and that disintegrating any and all existing legal-constitutional inequities and disparities between Canadian citizens and First Nations individuals would also resolve all social disparities between them. Massive and widespread opposition to papa Trudeau's proposal resulted in its early demise and represents an evolutionary milestone in Canada's constitutional and political relationship with First Nations peoples. Assimilation was no longer a tolerable objective.

    In the 1982 Constitution Act the right of First Nations groups to autonomy and self-government is clearly expressed, (along with Canada finally seizing its own formal sovereignty separate from the monarchy and British parliament), and since then Canadian governments have unilaterally failed to actually allow First Nations self-governance or to effectively address the social ills and inequalities which afflict many First Nations communities. Financing and budgeting for public services is or has been jealously kept under federal control, and provincial and federal branches of government are notorious for bickering about whose fiscal and legal responsibility it is to provide basic social services for First Nations communities and individuals (while individuals and communities suffer).

    The inadequacy of existing legislation and the unaddressed needs of indigenous communities in Canada has fueled steady and rising opposition and protest in recent decades, and Trudeau Jr.'s significant reform proposals (which are presently being enacted and negotiated) marks a possible turning point into a third era of the Canadian/First-Nations relationship which seeks to honor and restore the spirit and intent of original treaties and promises through serious investment and the relinquishment of direct political jurisdiction and control over first Nations lands and peoples.


    In 2016 Canada fully endorsed the United Nations Declaration on the rights of Indigenous Peoples (UNDRIP), which is the broadest and strongest possible rhetorical commitment toward repairing and restoring the sovereignty and culture of indigenous groups impacted by modern colonialism, and more or less represents an ideal standard that the government has ostensibly decided to aim for. In 2017 Trudeau dissolved the decades old government branch and institution which had previously managed indigenous communities (INAC) and is forming at least two new branches along with launching a massive series of nation wide meetings meant to gather input from different communities. It's not clear at all what will come of this reform shakeup. Indigenous groups are fearing that it's more of the same shit from the table top that will delay meaningful change, and some critics fear it's more of a PR campaign meant to pacify rather than seriously transfer control and sovereignty to First Nations communities like their rhetoric suggests.

    What is clear is that the gargantuan task of remedying social ills (addiction, sex trafficking, no access to quality education or health facilities on or near reserves, and others) while also transferring the duties of care that are currently held by Canadian governments, is made extremely difficult and additionally complex by the unique history and circumstances of Canadian constitutional law and identity (the diverse plethora of treaties, Canada's Crown-inherited obligations, and the series of conflicting constitutional developments), and especially more complex by the unique situations that are facing the thousands of individual indigenous communities and groups, each with their own individual needs and claims to self-governance.

    Canada does currently have a constitutional obligation to care for indigenous people and communities with the same standards that it applies to non-indigenous communities and individuals (1982 Constitution Act), and even though it is currently failing to do so in many ways, it is not clear that transferring direct financial control to individual communities would result in improvement (it might result in an even lower standard of care being delivered). The band-council system which does or has functioned as a political conduit between indigenous groups and Canadian governments may lack the expertise and oversight required to act as efficient managers of social services. If the Canadian government did transfer jurisdictional and financial control to individual First Nation groups and communities, and for whatever reason it resulted in an increase in social problems for those communities, then Canada will have failed in its constitutional obligation to ensure the safety of indigenous peoples, despite having in some sense relinquished it by allowing self-governance.

    There's also an inherent conflict of interest between the Canadian government's ability to care for non-indigenous Canadians and how much land and resources it is actually prepared to invest in the sovereignty and physical/cultural restoration of indigenous First Nations groups. Huge swaths of land which would otherwise be exploited for natural resources would, by ancient rights, belong to specific indigenous groups, and capital which would otherwise be invested in Canadian national interest might be required to fund a kind of archipelago of internal sovereign nations, and the expenses this would generate might not be sustainable.

    Assimilation seems to still be the knee-jerk utilitarian response to such obstacles, but it is a painfully learned truth that forceful integration and assimilation of a people who wish to retain their culture does not work. It is also legally and constitutionally true that Canada owes indigenous groups a debt of loyalty, of care, and of earth and water. With the second era of Canadian-Indigenous relations coming to a close (an era marked by inadequacy, incompetence, and failure on the part of the Canadian government) how can the Canadian government ensure success in all of its commitments for social improvement while relinquishing managerial control? What are the logistical implications of establishing possibly hundreds of locally sovereign governments and jurisdictions in indigenous communities across Canada? What expense should Canadian federal and provincial governments be prepared accept toward reaching its newly proclaimed intentions?
  • frank
    15.7k
    With the second era of Canadian-Indigenous relations coming to a close (an era marked by inadequacy, incompetence, and failure on the part of the Canadian government) how can the Canadian government ensure success in all of its commitments for social improvement while relinquishing managerial control? What are the logistical implications of establishing possibly hundreds of locally sovereign governments and jurisdictions in indigenous communities across CanadaVagabondSpectre

    Native American governments have been prone to corruption in the States and actually fostered drug addiction in some cases. I dont know what the solution to that is.

    Some of the reservations in the states exist because of donated land. How will Canada allocate land?

    In the states reservations often make money with casinos (which are illegal outside the reservations). How will Canadian Natives finance things like law enforcement?
  • VagabondSpectre
    1.9k
    Some of the reservations in the states exist because of donated land. How will Canada allocate land?frank

    Most likely according to heritage, historical treaties and land agreements, and need, but it is not yet clear exactly what will happen and how it will take place.

    In the states reservations often make money with casinos (which are illegal outside the reservations). How will Canadian Natives finance things like law enforcement?frank

    This, the corruption issue you mentioned, and many others are a part of the central dilemma entailed in relinquishing control while promising a raise in standards. It's a risk that that is hard to mitigate. Short of exorbitant investment, can it be mitigated at all if Canada is to truly allow indigenous groups to govern themselves?
  • frank
    15.7k
    Natives tend to be poor and vulnerable. I would guess that being cut off further from Canadian society would be disastrous if it happened abruptly.

    In the US, federally recognized tribe members get a free college education. A lot of them use it to become lawyers. Does Canada do that?
  • VagabondSpectre
    1.9k
    In the US, federally recognized tribe members get a free college education. A lot of them use it to become lawyers. Does Canada do that?frank

    The same is true in Canada, but systemic failure to provide equitable education even in recent decades has meant that on reserve students are massively less likely to attend secondary education to begin with (remoteness (expense), chronic under-funding, and managerial/bureaucratic incompetence to blame in recent decades)

    Natives tend to be poor and vulnerable. I would guess that being cut off further from Canadian society would be disastrous if it happened abruptly.frank

    Some have said the recent endeavor is happening too abruptly (and stinks of indigenous non-participation). They argue that it would be better to allow indigenous communities to organize and call for meetings on their own time, which makes a good deal of sense if the government is to honor its intention of allowing self-governance. On the other hand reform is long overdue...
  • frank
    15.7k
    They argue that it would be better to allow indigenous communities to organize and call for meetings on their own time, which makes a good deal of sense if the government is to honor its intention of allowing self-governance. On the other hand reform is long overdue...VagabondSpectre

    Yeah, ask them what they want and how the government can help them get it. Maybe they already have some ideas.
  • VagabondSpectre
    1.9k
    Yeah, ask them what they want and how the government can help them get it. Maybe they already have some ideas.frank

    The problem is that the federal Government unilaterally decided to have the wave of meetings across the nation and is already making (some) plans and taking actions on its own without consulting First Nations groups before hand (what those plans are specifically are still unclear). I don't think unilaterally calling for open communication is a bad thing in any way, but critics are wary of intentions given the history of failure.
  • frank
    15.7k
    Wow. That actually sounds exciting. I hope something awesome comes of it.
  • VagabondSpectre
    1.9k
    It's fairly exciting, but not uncontroversial. The first ten minutes of this News video encapsulates the trepidation and complaints coming from many First Nations groups.

    Note: The "white paper" refers to papa Trudeau's 1969 axed total assimilation proposal mentioned in the OP.

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