Labour relations and Indian self-determination : a Fort Alexander case study

This case study examines a labour relations issue which initially involves teacher employees of the Sagkeeng Education Authority of the Fort Alexander Band on one hand and the Sagkeeng Education Authority and the Fort Alexander Chief and Council on the other. The events of the issue transpire betwee...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Anderson, Brian
Other Authors: Dyer, Aldrich (Audie), Littlejohn, Cathy
Format: Thesis
Language:English
Published: University of Saskatchewan 1987
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10388/etd-11072006-090933
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spelling ftusaskatchewan:oai:harvest.usask.ca:10388/etd-11072006-090933 2023-05-15T16:17:13+02:00 Labour relations and Indian self-determination : a Fort Alexander case study Anderson, Brian Dyer, Aldrich (Audie) Littlejohn, Cathy November 1987 http://hdl.handle.net/10388/etd-11072006-090933 en_US eng University of Saskatchewan http://hdl.handle.net/10388/etd-11072006-090933 TC-SSU-11072006090933 aboriginal native peoples indian labour relations self-determination text Thesis 1987 ftusaskatchewan 2022-01-17T11:50:54Z This case study examines a labour relations issue which initially involves teacher employees of the Sagkeeng Education Authority of the Fort Alexander Band on one hand and the Sagkeeng Education Authority and the Fort Alexander Chief and Council on the other. The events of the issue transpire between 1981 and 1986.Teacher employees, concerned with working conditions and job security, organized as a local of the Manitoba Teachers' Society which was certified under the Canada Labour Code. The Chief and Council of the Fort Alexander Band rejected the formation of the local and the applicability of the Canada Labour Code to labour relations on the reserve. Teachers were fired for union activities. Hearings were held by the Canada Labour Relations Board. Orders were issued by the Labour Board and a collective agreement was imposed by the Labour Board. The Chief and Council refused to follow the Labour Board's orders, and contempt of court hearings were held by the Federal Court. Fort Alexander officials, including the Chief and Council, were initially fined and subsequently jailed. The Minister of Indian Affairs, David Crombie, promised to initiate Department studies to examine the possibilities and implications of changing the labour relations regime to reflect Indian self-government. The dispute was eventually settled out of court but the issue of Indian government jurisdiction over labour relations remains unresolved.Conceived and sanctioned by the Manitoba Teachers' Society, the Canada Labour Relations Board and the Federal Court as a labour dispute, the researcher argues that the issue is more readily understood within the context of Indian self-determination and self-government. Concepts concerning philosophical, socio-economic, cultural, legal, political and historical aspects of the relationship between Indian peoples and the Canadian state are brought to bear on the issue. Concepts of group rights versus those of individual rights are examined.It is argued that the current labour relations legal regime is inconsistent with Indian self-determination and self-government. The researcher suggests jurisdiction over labour relations should be determined by First Nations' governments as consistent with the goals of self-determination and self-government. Conceptions of Indian labour relations jurisdiction are suggested. Thesis First Nations University of Saskatchewan: eCommons@USASK Canada Indian
institution Open Polar
collection University of Saskatchewan: eCommons@USASK
op_collection_id ftusaskatchewan
language English
topic aboriginal
native peoples
indian
labour relations
self-determination
spellingShingle aboriginal
native peoples
indian
labour relations
self-determination
Anderson, Brian
Labour relations and Indian self-determination : a Fort Alexander case study
topic_facet aboriginal
native peoples
indian
labour relations
self-determination
description This case study examines a labour relations issue which initially involves teacher employees of the Sagkeeng Education Authority of the Fort Alexander Band on one hand and the Sagkeeng Education Authority and the Fort Alexander Chief and Council on the other. The events of the issue transpire between 1981 and 1986.Teacher employees, concerned with working conditions and job security, organized as a local of the Manitoba Teachers' Society which was certified under the Canada Labour Code. The Chief and Council of the Fort Alexander Band rejected the formation of the local and the applicability of the Canada Labour Code to labour relations on the reserve. Teachers were fired for union activities. Hearings were held by the Canada Labour Relations Board. Orders were issued by the Labour Board and a collective agreement was imposed by the Labour Board. The Chief and Council refused to follow the Labour Board's orders, and contempt of court hearings were held by the Federal Court. Fort Alexander officials, including the Chief and Council, were initially fined and subsequently jailed. The Minister of Indian Affairs, David Crombie, promised to initiate Department studies to examine the possibilities and implications of changing the labour relations regime to reflect Indian self-government. The dispute was eventually settled out of court but the issue of Indian government jurisdiction over labour relations remains unresolved.Conceived and sanctioned by the Manitoba Teachers' Society, the Canada Labour Relations Board and the Federal Court as a labour dispute, the researcher argues that the issue is more readily understood within the context of Indian self-determination and self-government. Concepts concerning philosophical, socio-economic, cultural, legal, political and historical aspects of the relationship between Indian peoples and the Canadian state are brought to bear on the issue. Concepts of group rights versus those of individual rights are examined.It is argued that the current labour relations legal regime is inconsistent with Indian self-determination and self-government. The researcher suggests jurisdiction over labour relations should be determined by First Nations' governments as consistent with the goals of self-determination and self-government. Conceptions of Indian labour relations jurisdiction are suggested.
author2 Dyer, Aldrich (Audie)
Littlejohn, Cathy
format Thesis
author Anderson, Brian
author_facet Anderson, Brian
author_sort Anderson, Brian
title Labour relations and Indian self-determination : a Fort Alexander case study
title_short Labour relations and Indian self-determination : a Fort Alexander case study
title_full Labour relations and Indian self-determination : a Fort Alexander case study
title_fullStr Labour relations and Indian self-determination : a Fort Alexander case study
title_full_unstemmed Labour relations and Indian self-determination : a Fort Alexander case study
title_sort labour relations and indian self-determination : a fort alexander case study
publisher University of Saskatchewan
publishDate 1987
url http://hdl.handle.net/10388/etd-11072006-090933
geographic Canada
Indian
geographic_facet Canada
Indian
genre First Nations
genre_facet First Nations
op_relation http://hdl.handle.net/10388/etd-11072006-090933
TC-SSU-11072006090933
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