When the UN probes Canada’s First Nations tragedy, don’t expect results 
<http://www.theglobeandmail.com/commentary/when-the-un-probes-canadas-first-nations-tragedy-dont-expect-results/article14799518/>

HAYDEN KING

Contributed to The Globe and Mail

Published Thursday, Oct. 10 2013, 12:17 PM EDT

Last updated Thursday, Oct. 10 2013, 4:34 PM EDT

http://www.theglobeandmail.com/commentary/when-the-un-probes-canadas-first-nations-tragedy-dont-expect-results/article14799518/

After months of failed attempts seeking permission to enter Canada and 
investigate the relationship between Indigenous peoples and Canadians, James 
Anaya, Special Rapporteur to the United Nations on Indigenous peoples, has 
arrived. He was greeted earlier this week by more than 50 protests, rallies and 
round dances across the country (under the banner of Idle No More), most 
proclaiming treaty rights or rights to land and resources.

As he travels the country over the next week, Mr. Anaya will hear a lot about 
violations of these rights in Canadian law but also international law, 
specifically the United Nation’s Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous 
Peoples (UNDRIP). It’s unclear if any of it will matter.

There is no doubt that the 500-year long struggle for indigenous rights in 
international law has been hard-fought. Foundational laws like The Doctrine of 
Discovery and concepts of Terra Nullius declared indigenous peoples non-human 
and permitted the “legal” theft of entire continents. It wasn’t until 1957, 
with the United Nation’s Indigenous and Tribal Populations Convention, that 
indigenous peoples were able to challenge their imposed inferiority. Since 
then, negotiations with states on the scope and nature of indigenous rights has 
produced a number of legal instruments, most importantly, the aforementioned 
Declaration in 2007.

As the preamble states, the Declaration represents a “standard of achievement 
to be pursued in a spirit of partnership and mutual respect” between states and 
indigenous peoples. Over forty-six articles, the document espouses rights to 
define membership and identity, rights to have previous poor treatment 
redressed and the right to revitalize their traditions and cultures. Rights to 
participate in both domestic governments that make decisions that affect 
indigenous peoples and their own governance systems, the right to 
self-determination. Of course, there is also the right to free, prior and 
informed consent on all legislation or development plans affecting indigenous 
peoples.

Yet there are also problems with Declaration. The most significant is the last 
Article, included in eleventh-hour negotiations as a bone for states. Article 
46 states that “Nothing in this Declaration may be interpreted as…encouraging 
any action, which would dismember or impair, totally or in part, the 
territorial integrity or political unity of sovereign and independent States.” 
Unfortunately “territorial integrity” and “political unity” can be interpreted 
unilaterally by those states. When Australian officials endorsed the UNDRIP 
they noted, “our concerns with free, prior and informed consent will be 
interpreted in accordance with Article 46.” This is effectively a backdoor out 
of the Declaration.

Moreover, the UNDRIP requires only voluntary implementation by states, which 
ultimately reduces the relationship to status quo ante – indigenous peoples 
struggling to convince Canada to recognize rights. In this sense, the tools of 
international law fall within the scope of what Glen Coulthard calls “the 
politics of recognition,” a form of negotiation that entrenches and reinforces 
state authority over indigenous peoples by requiring the latter seek validation 
and permitting the former to offer modification of any potential rights. When 
confronted with a country adverse to indigenous rights, this is a big problem.

Canada is indeed adverse. Despite the malleability of the Declaration, 
officials from this country first lobbied hard against it (leading the United 
States, New Zealand and Australia along). Then, when finding itself the very 
last hold-out to endorsement, eventually acquiescing but with stipulations: 
former minister John Duncan emphasized the Declaration as “aspirational” and 
“non-binding” and that the Articles were already “consistent with this 
government’s approach”. When Mr. Anaya was invited by the Union of B.C. Indian 
Chiefs to investigate violations of the Declaration in Canada, the government 
refused to respond to his requests for eight months.

So, will any of Mr. Anaya’s work in Canada actually lead to change? Given that 
the deference the Declaration offers states doesn’t go far enough for Canada or 
that minimum standards of internationally protected rights beyond those 
established in domestic law (and then barely those) have yet to even be 
considered, it is difficult to imagine how Mr. Anaya might help. Certainly 
communities will express frustration and demonstrate unfairness. Mr. Anaya will 
then write a report to be used by educators and activists to shame Canada. But 
they’ll be dealing with a government impervious to shame (consider the 
unchanged legislative agenda post-Idle No More).

Thomas Berger called the treatment of indigenous peoples under international 
law a “long and terrible shadow.” When that shadow started to recede with the 
endorsement of the Declaration, Cree legal scholar Sharon Venne proclaimed 
indigenous peoples were finally “subjects as opposed to objects” of 
international law. I agree with both sentiments. But International law or 
Special Rapporteurs have yet to stop the alienation of indigenous peoples from 
the land and the resulting socio-economic challenges in Canada. Until there is 
a government willing to seriously consider the Declaration, to embrace “the 
spirit of partnership and mutual respect” those tools will continue to fail.

Hayden King is an Assistant Professor of Politics and Indigenous Governance at 
Ryerson University. He is Anishinaabe from Beausoleil First Nation on 
Gchi’mnissing in Huronia, Ontario.

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