This collection of many voices develops more deeply and
exhaustively the issues raised in the editors' earlier volume,
Pathways to Self-Determination. It contains some twenty-three
papers from representatives of the aboriginal people's
organizations, of governments, and of a variety of academic
disciplines, along with introductions and an epilogue by the
editors and appendices of the key constitutional documents from
1763.
The contributors represent a broad cross-section of tribal,
geographic, and organizational perspectives. They discuss
constitutional questions such as land rights, the concerns of
Metis, non-status Indians, and Inuit; and native rights in broad
contexts - historical, legal/constitutional, political, regional,
and international.
The issue of aboriginal rights and of what these rights mean in
terms of land and sovereignty has become increasingly important on
the Canadian political agenda. The constitutional conferences
between government and aboriginal peoples have revealed the gulf
between what each side means by aboriginal rights: for the Indians
these rights are meaningless without sovereign self-government, an
idea the federal and provincial governments are not willing to
entertain. Somewhere in the middle lies the concept of nationhood
status.
Ultimately, the aboriginal peoples are asking for justice from
the dominant society around them; if it is denied or felt to be
denied, the editors conclude, the consequences for the Canadian
self-concept would be costly and debilitating. The twenty-four
contributors provide a find guide to this profound and complex
problem, whose solution depends on our understanding and our
political wisdom.
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