Institutional Change on First Nations: Examining factors influencing First Nations Adoption of the Framework Agreement on First Nation Land Management

In 1999 the Canadian Federal government passed the First Nations Land Management Act, ratifying the Framework Agreement on First Nation Land Management signed by the government and 14 original signatory First Nations in 1996. This Agreement allows First Nations to opt out of the 34 land code provisi...

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Main Authors: Doidge, Mary, Deaton, B. James, Woods, Bethany
Format: Report
Language:unknown
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Online Access:https://ageconsearch.umn.edu/record/150519/files/Doidge%20Deaton%20Woods%20AAEA%20submission.pdf
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spelling ftrepec:oai:RePEc:ags:aaea13:150519 2024-04-14T08:11:34+00:00 Institutional Change on First Nations: Examining factors influencing First Nations Adoption of the Framework Agreement on First Nation Land Management Doidge, Mary Deaton, B. James Woods, Bethany https://ageconsearch.umn.edu/record/150519/files/Doidge%20Deaton%20Woods%20AAEA%20submission.pdf unknown https://ageconsearch.umn.edu/record/150519/files/Doidge%20Deaton%20Woods%20AAEA%20submission.pdf preprint ftrepec 2024-03-19T10:38:28Z In 1999 the Canadian Federal government passed the First Nations Land Management Act, ratifying the Framework Agreement on First Nation Land Management signed by the government and 14 original signatory First Nations in 1996. This Agreement allows First Nations to opt out of the 34 land code provisions of the Indian Act and develop individual land codes, and has been promoted as a means of increasing First Nation autonomy and facilitating economic growth and development on reserve lands. This paper is the first to empirically examine factors that may influence a First Nation’s decision to become signatory to the Framework Agreement. There are currently 77 First Nation signatories to the Agreement, 39 with operational independent land codes. A unique dataset characterizing each First Nation by socioeconomic and demographic characteristics is used with a probit model to determine the effects of these characteristics on the probability of First Nation adoption of the Agreement. The results of this study indicate that proximity to an urban centre positively affects the probability that a First Nation will adopt. This finding is consistent with the idea that urban proximity is associated with increased economic opportunities, and that First Nations close to urban centres may adopt the Framework Agreement to gain greater control over their reserve land in an attempt to capture these opportunities. International Relations/Trade, Land Economics/Use, Research and Development/Tech Change/Emerging Technologies Report First Nations RePEc (Research Papers in Economics) Indian
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collection RePEc (Research Papers in Economics)
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description In 1999 the Canadian Federal government passed the First Nations Land Management Act, ratifying the Framework Agreement on First Nation Land Management signed by the government and 14 original signatory First Nations in 1996. This Agreement allows First Nations to opt out of the 34 land code provisions of the Indian Act and develop individual land codes, and has been promoted as a means of increasing First Nation autonomy and facilitating economic growth and development on reserve lands. This paper is the first to empirically examine factors that may influence a First Nation’s decision to become signatory to the Framework Agreement. There are currently 77 First Nation signatories to the Agreement, 39 with operational independent land codes. A unique dataset characterizing each First Nation by socioeconomic and demographic characteristics is used with a probit model to determine the effects of these characteristics on the probability of First Nation adoption of the Agreement. The results of this study indicate that proximity to an urban centre positively affects the probability that a First Nation will adopt. This finding is consistent with the idea that urban proximity is associated with increased economic opportunities, and that First Nations close to urban centres may adopt the Framework Agreement to gain greater control over their reserve land in an attempt to capture these opportunities. International Relations/Trade, Land Economics/Use, Research and Development/Tech Change/Emerging Technologies
format Report
author Doidge, Mary
Deaton, B. James
Woods, Bethany
spellingShingle Doidge, Mary
Deaton, B. James
Woods, Bethany
Institutional Change on First Nations: Examining factors influencing First Nations Adoption of the Framework Agreement on First Nation Land Management
author_facet Doidge, Mary
Deaton, B. James
Woods, Bethany
author_sort Doidge, Mary
title Institutional Change on First Nations: Examining factors influencing First Nations Adoption of the Framework Agreement on First Nation Land Management
title_short Institutional Change on First Nations: Examining factors influencing First Nations Adoption of the Framework Agreement on First Nation Land Management
title_full Institutional Change on First Nations: Examining factors influencing First Nations Adoption of the Framework Agreement on First Nation Land Management
title_fullStr Institutional Change on First Nations: Examining factors influencing First Nations Adoption of the Framework Agreement on First Nation Land Management
title_full_unstemmed Institutional Change on First Nations: Examining factors influencing First Nations Adoption of the Framework Agreement on First Nation Land Management
title_sort institutional change on first nations: examining factors influencing first nations adoption of the framework agreement on first nation land management
url https://ageconsearch.umn.edu/record/150519/files/Doidge%20Deaton%20Woods%20AAEA%20submission.pdf
geographic Indian
geographic_facet Indian
genre First Nations
genre_facet First Nations
op_relation https://ageconsearch.umn.edu/record/150519/files/Doidge%20Deaton%20Woods%20AAEA%20submission.pdf
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