Indian Act By-Laws: A Viable Means for First Nations to (Re)Assert Control Over Local Matters Now and Not Later

Section 81 in the Indian Act, RSC 1985, c I-5, contains a broad range of subject matters over which Band Councils may pass by-laws. To date, this provision has been underutilized by most First Nation governments. One of the main reasons for this relates to the fact that, for over a hundred years, th...

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Main Author: Metallic, Naiomi
Format: Text
Language:unknown
Published: Schulich Law Scholars 2016
Subjects:
Law
Online Access:https://digitalcommons.schulichlaw.dal.ca/scholarly_works/147
https://works.bepress.com/naiomi-metallic/7/download/
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spelling ftdalhouseunissl:oai:digitalcommons.schulichlaw.dal.ca:scholarly_works-1146 2023-06-11T04:11:43+02:00 Indian Act By-Laws: A Viable Means for First Nations to (Re)Assert Control Over Local Matters Now and Not Later Metallic, Naiomi 2016-01-01T08:00:00Z https://digitalcommons.schulichlaw.dal.ca/scholarly_works/147 https://works.bepress.com/naiomi-metallic/7/download/ unknown Schulich Law Scholars https://digitalcommons.schulichlaw.dal.ca/scholarly_works/147 https://works.bepress.com/naiomi-metallic/7/download/ Articles, Book Chapters, & Popular Press First Nations By-Laws Self-Government Governance Indigenous Indian and Aboriginal Law Law text 2016 ftdalhouseunissl 2023-05-06T23:11:30Z Section 81 in the Indian Act, RSC 1985, c I-5, contains a broad range of subject matters over which Band Councils may pass by-laws. To date, this provision has been underutilized by most First Nation governments. One of the main reasons for this relates to the fact that, for over a hundred years, the Indian Act gave the federal government the power to disallow any such by-laws and Canada historically took a narrow view of the expanse of the Section 81 by-law powers and exercised its disallowance power broadly. Recent amendments to the Indian Act, however, have repealed this disallowance power, giving Bands greater freedom to pass by-laws. Nonetheless, the validity of such by-laws will continue to be subject to review by the courts. This paper explores the modern interpretation and constitutional principles that will inform the determination of validity of such by-laws and concludes that such principles mandate that the by-law powers should be interpreted expansively and include First Nation jurisdiction over local matters on reserve, including the provision of essential services. The author argues that First Nations should seriously explore using the Indian Act by-laws in the manner proposed, even though such bylaws have often been denigrated as only a ‘delegated’ and not an inherent form of self-government jurisdiction. This is so because of the slow pace of self-government negotiations and the urgent need for change in the manner in which key essential services are currently provided on First Nations reserves. Text First Nations Schulich Scholars (Schulich School of Law, Dalhousie University) Canada Indian
institution Open Polar
collection Schulich Scholars (Schulich School of Law, Dalhousie University)
op_collection_id ftdalhouseunissl
language unknown
topic First Nations
By-Laws
Self-Government
Governance
Indigenous
Indian
and Aboriginal Law
Law
spellingShingle First Nations
By-Laws
Self-Government
Governance
Indigenous
Indian
and Aboriginal Law
Law
Metallic, Naiomi
Indian Act By-Laws: A Viable Means for First Nations to (Re)Assert Control Over Local Matters Now and Not Later
topic_facet First Nations
By-Laws
Self-Government
Governance
Indigenous
Indian
and Aboriginal Law
Law
description Section 81 in the Indian Act, RSC 1985, c I-5, contains a broad range of subject matters over which Band Councils may pass by-laws. To date, this provision has been underutilized by most First Nation governments. One of the main reasons for this relates to the fact that, for over a hundred years, the Indian Act gave the federal government the power to disallow any such by-laws and Canada historically took a narrow view of the expanse of the Section 81 by-law powers and exercised its disallowance power broadly. Recent amendments to the Indian Act, however, have repealed this disallowance power, giving Bands greater freedom to pass by-laws. Nonetheless, the validity of such by-laws will continue to be subject to review by the courts. This paper explores the modern interpretation and constitutional principles that will inform the determination of validity of such by-laws and concludes that such principles mandate that the by-law powers should be interpreted expansively and include First Nation jurisdiction over local matters on reserve, including the provision of essential services. The author argues that First Nations should seriously explore using the Indian Act by-laws in the manner proposed, even though such bylaws have often been denigrated as only a ‘delegated’ and not an inherent form of self-government jurisdiction. This is so because of the slow pace of self-government negotiations and the urgent need for change in the manner in which key essential services are currently provided on First Nations reserves.
format Text
author Metallic, Naiomi
author_facet Metallic, Naiomi
author_sort Metallic, Naiomi
title Indian Act By-Laws: A Viable Means for First Nations to (Re)Assert Control Over Local Matters Now and Not Later
title_short Indian Act By-Laws: A Viable Means for First Nations to (Re)Assert Control Over Local Matters Now and Not Later
title_full Indian Act By-Laws: A Viable Means for First Nations to (Re)Assert Control Over Local Matters Now and Not Later
title_fullStr Indian Act By-Laws: A Viable Means for First Nations to (Re)Assert Control Over Local Matters Now and Not Later
title_full_unstemmed Indian Act By-Laws: A Viable Means for First Nations to (Re)Assert Control Over Local Matters Now and Not Later
title_sort indian act by-laws: a viable means for first nations to (re)assert control over local matters now and not later
publisher Schulich Law Scholars
publishDate 2016
url https://digitalcommons.schulichlaw.dal.ca/scholarly_works/147
https://works.bepress.com/naiomi-metallic/7/download/
geographic Canada
Indian
geographic_facet Canada
Indian
genre First Nations
genre_facet First Nations
op_source Articles, Book Chapters, & Popular Press
op_relation https://digitalcommons.schulichlaw.dal.ca/scholarly_works/147
https://works.bepress.com/naiomi-metallic/7/download/
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