The Road Between: An Interim First Nations Accountability Regime

The Federal Government of Canada’s current First Nations accountability regime is an extension of a longstanding paternalistic relationship with First Nations governments, and the struggle to build final agreements is indicative of Canada’s resistance to First Nations sovereignty. This paper explore...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Cvitko, Steven Dane
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: djim 2015
Subjects:
Online Access:https://ojs.library.dal.ca/djim/article/view/2015vol11Cvitko
Description
Summary:The Federal Government of Canada’s current First Nations accountability regime is an extension of a longstanding paternalistic relationship with First Nations governments, and the struggle to build final agreements is indicative of Canada’s resistance to First Nations sovereignty. This paper explores an interim accountability regime during the negotiations of these final agreements. The accountability regime will need to reconcile notions of First Nations self-governance to indigenize accountability both within and across First Nations. The Federal Government of Canada can foster First Nations governance with the implementation of the Kelowna Accord and by working collaboratively with First Nations governments to identify an appropriate interim accountability regime through Outcome Management.