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Discussion UNDRIP: land owners loosing their rights

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AnneM

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I first heard about UNDRIP ( the United Nations Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous People) three years ago. My thoughts were, NO WAY?!
This document originated in Canada as an ideology. When the story came out regarding the mass graves from the indigenous schools ( you can read the book "Grave Error"on that subject) Trudeau announced the situation a genocide and the United Nations gave Canada its blessing to implement UNDRIP. Trudeau made it Federal Law.

British Columbia went one step further and added it to Provincial Law calling it DRIPA (Declaration of the rights of Indigenous Peoples Act). No other jurisdiction in the world has done this.
Last month the federal government released an agreement with the Musqueam Tribe that is a rights recognition framework that officially changes how the federal government not only views ownership but also management in the lower mainland. The government is acknowledging that not only do the Musqueam's have claims to the land but that they hold aborigianl title within their traditional territory. This is the 3rd land claim to happen in British Columbia. The Squamish and the Kawatchewan (spelling?) Band are the other two tribe's that have successfully obtained land rights in the court of law.

Freedom of Information (FOI) requests made by the public to receive more information about this situation have been denied. The government has implemented a new policy that information regarding anything to do with the First Nations will be off limits to FOI requests



The UNDRIP document can be found in the Waterloo Region Information Archives on this site

So, based on what the government is doing in B.C. should the other provinces be concerned about loosing their land rights??
I say YES. The land acknowledgement that has been voluntarily implemented into schools, theatres, government meetings is a sign of the psychological nudging that could explode this into much more.
 
I first read this and thought the same thing, like this sounds way bigger than what people are talking about publicly.
I think it is big, but maybe not in the way you’re framing it. It’s more of a legal evolution than some sudden takeover.
 
I think it's mostly behind-the-scenes for now. It affects governance, land use decisions, and legal recognition more than everyday life, at least currently.
Yeah but that’s kind of how big changes usually start. Quiet at first, then more noticeable later.
 
Yeah but that’s kind of how big changes usually start. Quiet at first, then more noticeable later.
Exactly. People saying “it’s no big deal” are ignoring that these frameworks shape future decisions.
 
Exactly. People saying “it’s no big deal” are ignoring that these frameworks shape future decisions.
The FOI request denial is the weirdest part to me. Why shut people out of information unless there’s something controversial?
 
The FOI request denial is the weirdest part to me. Why shut people out of information unless there’s something controversial?
Or it could be for privacy or legal reasons. Not every restriction means something shady is happening.
 
Or it could be for privacy or legal reasons. Not every restriction means something shady is happening.
Sure, but completely blocking access creates unnecessary suspicion. That’s just bad policy optics.
 
But the concern about “losing land rights” isn’t completely baseless. If authority shifts, that’s still a loss of control in some sense.
 
I think people are mixing up ownership and control. Those aren’t always the same thing legally.
 
True, but for most people, control is what actually matters day-to-day.
And historically, Indigenous groups had neither ownership recognized nor control respected. That’s kind of the point of these changes.
 
And historically, Indigenous groups had neither ownership recognized nor control respected. That’s kind of the point of these changes.
The timing is what makes people question it though. The genocide statement, then policy changes, it feels connected politically.
 
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