COMMENT: Indigenous? Let me count …

I have been attending the Nation-to-Nation conference (of which Canadian Mining Journal is a sponsor) in Ottawa this week. This is one […]

Topics

Regions

Tags

I have been attending the Nation-to-Nation conference (of which Canadian Mining Journal is a sponsor) in Ottawa this week. This is one of several such meetings held around the country with the intent of finding a means to bring indigenous peoples fully into the Canadian socio-economic world of the Twenty-first Century. The change is long overdue: 150 years overdue. The speakers have been thoughtful and results oriented. But before the federal and provincial governments can ask the important questions, Canada’s indigenous communities must answer this one: What is our nation? Or nations? There is no agreement on the number of indigenous nations in this land. AFN Chief Perry Bellegarde puts the total at 58. Sixty-something is a number frequently posited by politicians. Others suggest there may be more than 600 as every community could be considered a nation unto itself. Or do they fall into only three – First Nations, Metis and Inuit? The number of nations is a question that can only be answered by the indigenous community. No political party, no government agency, program or institution, and certainly no non-indigenous person or consultant can answer the question. This decision rests solely with those most closely affected by the outcome. And it won’t be an easy decision. I will be covering more of the Nation(s)-to-Nation discussion in CMJ’s January 2018 issue. Read it to catch up on all the pressing and complicated issues that affect this issue as governments more forward.

Comments

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Dec 01 2024 - Dec 02 2024
Dec 03 2024 - Dec 05 2024