Recognizing Indigenous Peoples Rights in Canada

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Recognizing Indigenous Peoples Rights in Canada Dr. M.A. (Peggy) Smith, RPF Faculty of Natural Resources Management Lakehead University, Thunder Bay, Ontario, Canada Presented to MEGAflorestais, Whistler, BC, June 7, 2012

Acknowledge Salish peoples & their lands

Overview International National Provincial Key Issues

International: UNDRIP & Doctrine of Discovery UN Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples, 2007 Canada 2010 FPIC Free Prior Informed Consent 8.2: States to provide effective mechanisms for prevention of & redress for any action that dispossesses Indigenous peoples of lands, territories or resources 10: No forcible removal or relocation from lands or territories without FPIC 26.1: Right to lands, territories & resources traditionally owned, occupied, used or acquired 26.2: Right to own, use, develop & control lands, territories & resources through traditional ownership or occupation or use 28.1: Right to redress for lands, territories & resources confiscated, taken, occupied, used or damaged without FPIC

International RRI, 2012, Respecting Resources, Delivering Development: Forest Tenure Reform since Rio 1992 http://www.rightsandresources.org/publication_details.php?publicationid=4935

International < 1/3 (18 of 59) are minimally consistent with rights required by UNDRIP land rights (i.e., unlimited duration of rights to access, withdrawal & exclusion) RRI,

International: Doctrine of Discovery 15 th Century Papal Bull: Right to claim lands for Christian monarchs terra nullius

Royal Proclamation, 1763 Acknowledged Aboriginal people s occupation & use ( hunting grounds ) Provided that only Crown could enter into land surrenders/agreements the honour of the Crown Development & settlement to take place only after agreement reached Treaties conflicting interpretations: surrender or sharing?

Credit: National Archives of Canada, C30195 National > 1 million Aboriginal peoples < 4% of total Canadian population Library of Congress Prints and Photographs, Photograph by Frank E. Kleinschmidt 1828 FRAZER RIVER, YALE, B.C. by Sherriff Scott s. 35 Constitution Act, 1982 1) The existing aboriginal treaty rights of the aboriginal peoples of Canada are hereby recognized affirmed 2) Aboriginal Peoples of Canada includes the Indian [First Nations], Inuit & Métis

50 languages belonging to 11 major language families 10 First Nations & Inuktitut ~ 650 First Nations (Indian Act Bands )

Tenure Conditions under which land is held or occupied For forest lands: the process by which provincial governments who own Crown land give access to others for use of that land Historically, provinces gave long-term (20-25 years), evergreen licenses to large forest companies in exchange for royalties & some management responsibilities System ignored Aboriginal peoples tenure of land

First Nation Tenure in Canada

GOVERNMENT OF CANADA Indians, and Lands reserved for the Indians s. 91(24) Aboriginal & treaty rights s. 35, 1982 PROVINCIAL GOVERNMENTS Natural Resources s. 92

Supreme Court of Canada Decisions on Aboriginal & Treaty Rights CASE DATE OUTCOME Calder 1973 Recognition of Nisga a ownership or Aboriginal title ; led to land claims Constitution Act, 1982, s. 35(1): The existing aboriginal & treaty rights of the aboriginal peoples of Canada are hereby recognized and affirmed. S. 35(2): "aboriginal peoples of Canada" includes Indian, Inuit and Métis peoples Sparrow 1990 s. 35 must be interpreted liberally; the Sparrow test

Supreme Court of Canada Decisions (cont d) CASE DATE OUTCOME Delgamuukw 1997 Duty to consult; oral evidence given equal weight with historic written evidence in land claim cases, standards for proving rights based on historic use Haida 2004 Crown (province & federal governments) has major duty to consult, not private companies Mikisew 2005 Duty to consult applies to treaty areas, not just Aboriginal title areas (Treaty #8) Sappier & Gray 2006 Mi kmaq have right to harvest timber on Crown land for personal use Source: Anderson & Bone 2003: 6

Duty to Consult A government obligation To protect Aboriginal & treaty rights More than minimum acceptable standard Carried out in good faith Intent: to substantially addressing concerns of Aboriginal peoples whose lands are at issue Case-specific each community has to negotiate with the Crown

Provincial Governments Struggling to address Aboriginal & treaty rights Passing buck to federal government Struggling to find a way to create shared understanding with Aboriginal communities Struggling with consultation that is more than minimum acceptable standard Not providing Aboriginal communities the means to participate Not consulting on certain key decisions affecting Aboriginal & treaty rights allocation of timber resources and licenses

Key Issues Conflicting jurisdictions need co-operation between federal & provincial governments Having Aboriginal & treaty rights provide the foundation for relationships economic development & capacity building are then an outcome Reconciliation & respect acknowledging & overcoming our colonial history Negotiations to share tenure/power