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Assembly of First Nations

The Assembly of First Nations (French: Assemblée des Premières Nations, AFN) is an assembly of Canadian First Nations (Indian bands) represented by their chiefs. Established in 1982 and modelled on the United Nations General Assembly, it emerged from the National Indian Brotherhood, which dissolved in the late 1970s.

Assembly of First Nations
Assemblée des Premières Nations (French)
AFN Logo
AbbreviationAFN
FormationDeveloped from the NIB beginning in 1978, eventually holding its first meeting in April 1982 in Penticton, British Columbia.
HeadquartersOttawa, Ontario, Canada
Region served
Canada
Official language
English, French
National Chief
Joanna Bernard
Websitewww.afn.ca

The aims of the organization are to protect and advance the aboriginal and treaty rights and interests of First Nations in Canada, including health, education, culture and language.[1] It represents primarily status Indians.

The Métis and non-status Indians have organized in the same period as the Congress of Aboriginal Peoples (CAP). Reflecting changes in where Aboriginal peoples are living, it represents primarily urban Indians, including off-reserve status Indians and Inuit.

History Edit

Indigenous peoples of North America have created a variety of political organizations. Examples preceding European contact include the Iroquois Confederacy, or Haudenosaunee, the Blackfoot Confederacy, and Powhatan Confederacy in three different regions. There were other confederacies in New England, New York, and in the Southeast British colonies. Other groups formed later to enter into treaties with colonial governments led by ethnic French, Spanish and English.

During the late 19th and early 20th centuries, a number of regional Indigenous organizations were formed in Canada, such as the Grand Indian Council of Ontario and Quebec, and the Allied Tribes of B.C. After World War II, additional provincial and territorial organizations were founded and continued to expand their memberships in an effort to assert their rights to land and to protect their cultures.

Indigenous activists under the leadership of controversial lawyer William Wuttunee from Red Pheasant First Nation founded the National Indian Council (NIC) in 1961 to represent their peoples of Canada, including treaty/status Indians, non-status Indians, and the Métis, though not the Inuit, who took a different path.[2] This organization, however, collapsed in 1967 as the three groups failed to achieve consensus on their positions.

At the same time, other Indigenous activism was rising. Following the government's publication of its 1969 White Paper, George Manuel, Noel Doucette, Andrew Delisle, Omer Peters, Jack Sark, Dave Courchene, Roy Sam, Harold Sappier, Dave Ahenakew, Harold Cardinal, and Roy Daniels founded and incorporated the National Indian Brotherhood in 1970. It was intended as an umbrella organization for the various provincial and territorial organizations of status Indians, such as the Indian Association of Alberta.[3][4]

The Métis and non-status Indians set up a separate organization in 1971, known as the Native Council of Canada (NCC). It originally was made up of regional and provincial associations of these peoples. By the late 20th century, an increasing number of Aboriginal peoples were living in urban areas. With further development and led by Jim Sinclair, in 1993 it became the Congress of Aboriginal Peoples (CAP), representing urban and off-reserve Métis, non-status and status Indians. It also represents some Inuit.[5]

National Indian Brotherhood Edit

The National Indian Brotherhood (NIB) was a national political body made up of the leadership of the various provincial and territorial organizations (PTOs); it lobbied for changes to federal and provincial policies to support Indigenous rights and sovereignty.[6]

The following year, the NIB launched its first major campaign, which opposed the assimilationist proposals of the 1969 White Paper. In that, the Minister of Indian Affairs, Jean Chrétien, had proposed abolition of the Indian Act, rejection of Aboriginal land claims, and assimilation of First Nations people into the Canadian population, with the status of other ethnic minorities, who were largely descendants of immigrants, rather than as a distinct group reflecting Indigenous peoples history in North America.

Supported by a churches, labour, and other citizen groups, the NIB mounted massive opposition to the government plan. On June 3, 1970, the NIB presented the response by Harold Cardinal and the Indian Chiefs of Alberta (entitled "Citizens Plus" but commonly known as "The Red Paper") to Prime Minister Pierre Trudeau and ministers of his Cabinet. Startled by the strong opposition to the White Paper, the Prime Minister told the delegation that the White Paper recommendations would not be imposed against their will.

In 1972, the NIB submitted their policy paper Indian Control of Indian Education to the federal government, which generally accepted this proposal to devolve control of Indigenous education to the bands and reserves. The NIB gained national recognition on the issue of Indigenous education in Canada. Their work contributed to the government's ending the Canadian Residential School System, which had been long opposed by Indigenous people. It was also a first step in the push for Indigenous self-governance.[2][7]

In 1973, the Calder case decision was issued.[8] "You have more rights than I thought you did," Prime Minister Trudeau told the NIB leaders.

The NIB gained consultative status with the United Nations Economic and Social Council in 1974, until such time as an international Indigenous organization could be formed. When the World Council of Indigenous Peoples was formed on Nuu-chah-nulth territory the following year, under the leadership of George Manuel, it took the place of the NIB at the United Nations.

Shift toward representation for chiefs Edit

The NIB began to have its own tensions. Individual chiefs and regional groupings begin to chafe because their only access to the national scene was through their respective PTOs. The chiefs complained they were not being heard.

In 1978, in an effort to enable more opinions to be heard, NIB President Noel Starblanket organized an "All Chiefs Conference" on Indian Self-Government. The Chiefs were delighted with the opportunity. At a second All Chief Conference, the Chiefs announced that the All Chief Conference would be "the one and only voice of Indian people in Canada."

That same year Prime Minister Trudeau announced that Canada would patriate its constitution; essentially take over its governance. NIB and other groups questioned what would happen to the Treaty and aboriginal rights that had been guaranteed by the Imperial Crown, if Canada took over its own governance. They believed that strong national leadership from the Chiefs was essential. The Chiefs formalized their governance structure, compromised by incorporating a "Confederacy" composed largely of the NIB leadership, and made the NIB, an incorporated body, its administrative secretariat. They used the United Nations General Assembly as a model in conceiving how the new Assembly of First Nations would be structured and operate.

The Chiefs held their first assembly as "the Assembly of First Nations" (AFN) in Penticton, British Columbia, in April 1982. The new structure gave membership and voting rights directly to individual chiefs representing First Nations, rather than to representatives of their provincial/territorial organizations.[9][10] This structure was adopted in July 1985, as part of the Charter of the Assembly of First Nations.

Public perceptions Edit

The AFN depends upon the federal government for most of its funding. First Nations activists have sometimes accused it of being obsequious to the government as a result, and not sufficiently representative of the larger First Nations community.[11] But there is also widespread Indigenous support for continued operation of the AFN.[12]

In early 2013, the press reported that documents revealed that the AFN had been operating together with the Royal Canadian Mounted Police (RCMP) to provide information and conduct surveillance on members of First Nations communities. This was in response to their joint concerns over disruptions due to mass protests over issues of sovereignty, land claims, and related tensions. Reporters acquired the documents through access to information requests. The Star reported that heads of the RCMP, and of the Ontario and Quebec provincial police met in the summer of 2007 with AFN national chief Phil Fontaine to "facilitate a consistent and effective approach to managing Aboriginal protests and occupations."[13]

Principal organs Edit

  • National Chief (elected for a three-year term)
  • First Nations-in-Assembly
  • The Executive Committee (National Chief and regional chiefs from each province and territory)
  • Secretariat
  • Advisory councils
    • Council of Elders
    • Women's Council
    • Youth Council
    • Veterans' Council
    • 2SLGBTQQIA+

Presidents of the National Indian Brotherhood Edit

National Chiefs of the Assembly of First Nations Edit

See also Edit

References Edit

  1. ^ (PDF). AFN Executive Committee Reports. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2009-11-02.
  2. ^ a b Assembly of First Nations – The Story 2009-08-02 at the Wayback Machine
  3. ^ McFarlane, Peter (1993). Brotherhood to nationhood : George Manuel and the making of the modern Indian movement. Toronto: Between the Lines. ISBN 0921284667.
  4. ^ "First Nations Bill C-44" (PDF). The Assembly of First Nations.
  5. ^ Posluns, Michael (23 July 2007). "Congress of Aboriginal Peoples". The Canadian Encyclopedia. Retrieved 24 April 2021.
  6. ^ Pound, Richard W. (2005). 'Fitzhenry and Whiteside Book of Canadian Facts and Dates'. Fitzhenry and Whiteside.
  7. ^ A Brief History of the Education of First Nations Children: What Should They Learn and How Should They Learn it?, Iram Khan
  8. ^ Tester, Frank James; McNicoll, Paule; Forsyth, Jessie (Spring 1999). . Journal of Canadian Studies. 34: 52–74. doi:10.3138/jcs.34.1.52. S2CID 140481114. Archived from the original on 2007-07-06.
  9. ^ "The New order of government". Saskatchewan Indian. 12 (4): 30–32. May 1982.
  10. ^ . Saskatchewan Indian. No. v12 n04 p26. May 1982. Archived from the original on 2015-08-09. Retrieved 28 November 2019.
  11. ^ Watts, Vanessa; King, Hayden (2018-07-26). "After AFN national chief election, apathy and resignation remain". The Globe and Mail. Retrieved 2019-10-27.
  12. ^ Kinew, Wab (2014-05-07). "Why Canada Still Needs the Assembly of First Nations". HuffPost Canada. Retrieved 2019-10-27.
  13. ^ "Assembly of First Nations, RCMP co-operated on response to mass protests in 2007 | The Star". thestar.com. 15 February 2013. Retrieved 2019-03-03.
  14. ^ "Quebec regional Chief Picard takes interim AFN helm". APTN National News, July 16, 2014.
  15. ^ "RoseAnne Archibald ousted as AFN National Chief following investigation into her leadership". CTVNews. 2023-06-28. Retrieved 2023-06-29.

External links Edit

  • Assembly of First Nations
  • Continuing Negotiations: First Nations and the State — Historical essay, illustrated with photographs, drawings and artifacts
  • Assembly of First Nations - Canadian Political Parties and Political Interest Groups Web Archive created by the University of Toronto Libraries

assembly, first, nations, french, assemblée, premières, nations, assembly, canadian, first, nations, indian, bands, represented, their, chiefs, established, 1982, modelled, united, nations, general, assembly, emerged, from, national, indian, brotherhood, which. The Assembly of First Nations French Assemblee des Premieres Nations AFN is an assembly of Canadian First Nations Indian bands represented by their chiefs Established in 1982 and modelled on the United Nations General Assembly it emerged from the National Indian Brotherhood which dissolved in the late 1970s Assembly of First NationsAssemblee des Premieres Nations French AFN LogoAbbreviationAFNFormationDeveloped from the NIB beginning in 1978 eventually holding its first meeting in April 1982 in Penticton British Columbia HeadquartersOttawa Ontario CanadaRegion servedCanadaOfficial languageEnglish FrenchNational ChiefJoanna BernardWebsitewww wbr afn wbr caThe aims of the organization are to protect and advance the aboriginal and treaty rights and interests of First Nations in Canada including health education culture and language 1 It represents primarily status Indians The Metis and non status Indians have organized in the same period as the Congress of Aboriginal Peoples CAP Reflecting changes in where Aboriginal peoples are living it represents primarily urban Indians including off reserve status Indians and Inuit Contents 1 History 1 1 National Indian Brotherhood 1 2 Shift toward representation for chiefs 2 Public perceptions 3 Principal organs 4 Presidents of the National Indian Brotherhood 5 National Chiefs of the Assembly of First Nations 6 See also 7 References 8 External linksHistory EditMain article History of Indigenous organizations in Canada Indigenous peoples of North America have created a variety of political organizations Examples preceding European contact include the Iroquois Confederacy or Haudenosaunee the Blackfoot Confederacy and Powhatan Confederacy in three different regions There were other confederacies in New England New York and in the Southeast British colonies Other groups formed later to enter into treaties with colonial governments led by ethnic French Spanish and English During the late 19th and early 20th centuries a number of regional Indigenous organizations were formed in Canada such as the Grand Indian Council of Ontario and Quebec and the Allied Tribes of B C After World War II additional provincial and territorial organizations were founded and continued to expand their memberships in an effort to assert their rights to land and to protect their cultures Indigenous activists under the leadership of controversial lawyer William Wuttunee from Red Pheasant First Nation founded the National Indian Council NIC in 1961 to represent their peoples of Canada including treaty status Indians non status Indians and the Metis though not the Inuit who took a different path 2 This organization however collapsed in 1967 as the three groups failed to achieve consensus on their positions At the same time other Indigenous activism was rising Following the government s publication of its 1969 White Paper George Manuel Noel Doucette Andrew Delisle Omer Peters Jack Sark Dave Courchene Roy Sam Harold Sappier Dave Ahenakew Harold Cardinal and Roy Daniels founded and incorporated the National Indian Brotherhood in 1970 It was intended as an umbrella organization for the various provincial and territorial organizations of status Indians such as the Indian Association of Alberta 3 4 The Metis and non status Indians set up a separate organization in 1971 known as the Native Council of Canada NCC It originally was made up of regional and provincial associations of these peoples By the late 20th century an increasing number of Aboriginal peoples were living in urban areas With further development and led by Jim Sinclair in 1993 it became the Congress of Aboriginal Peoples CAP representing urban and off reserve Metis non status and status Indians It also represents some Inuit 5 National Indian Brotherhood Edit The National Indian Brotherhood NIB was a national political body made up of the leadership of the various provincial and territorial organizations PTOs it lobbied for changes to federal and provincial policies to support Indigenous rights and sovereignty 6 The following year the NIB launched its first major campaign which opposed the assimilationist proposals of the 1969 White Paper In that the Minister of Indian Affairs Jean Chretien had proposed abolition of the Indian Act rejection of Aboriginal land claims and assimilation of First Nations people into the Canadian population with the status of other ethnic minorities who were largely descendants of immigrants rather than as a distinct group reflecting Indigenous peoples history in North America Supported by a churches labour and other citizen groups the NIB mounted massive opposition to the government plan On June 3 1970 the NIB presented the response by Harold Cardinal and the Indian Chiefs of Alberta entitled Citizens Plus but commonly known as The Red Paper to Prime Minister Pierre Trudeau and ministers of his Cabinet Startled by the strong opposition to the White Paper the Prime Minister told the delegation that the White Paper recommendations would not be imposed against their will In 1972 the NIB submitted their policy paper Indian Control of Indian Education to the federal government which generally accepted this proposal to devolve control of Indigenous education to the bands and reserves The NIB gained national recognition on the issue of Indigenous education in Canada Their work contributed to the government s ending the Canadian Residential School System which had been long opposed by Indigenous people It was also a first step in the push for Indigenous self governance 2 7 In 1973 the Calder case decision was issued 8 You have more rights than I thought you did Prime Minister Trudeau told the NIB leaders The NIB gained consultative status with the United Nations Economic and Social Council in 1974 until such time as an international Indigenous organization could be formed When the World Council of Indigenous Peoples was formed on Nuu chah nulth territory the following year under the leadership of George Manuel it took the place of the NIB at the United Nations Shift toward representation for chiefs Edit The NIB began to have its own tensions Individual chiefs and regional groupings begin to chafe because their only access to the national scene was through their respective PTOs The chiefs complained they were not being heard In 1978 in an effort to enable more opinions to be heard NIB President Noel Starblanket organized an All Chiefs Conference on Indian Self Government The Chiefs were delighted with the opportunity At a second All Chief Conference the Chiefs announced that the All Chief Conference would be the one and only voice of Indian people in Canada That same year Prime Minister Trudeau announced that Canada would patriate its constitution essentially take over its governance NIB and other groups questioned what would happen to the Treaty and aboriginal rights that had been guaranteed by the Imperial Crown if Canada took over its own governance They believed that strong national leadership from the Chiefs was essential The Chiefs formalized their governance structure compromised by incorporating a Confederacy composed largely of the NIB leadership and made the NIB an incorporated body its administrative secretariat They used the United Nations General Assembly as a model in conceiving how the new Assembly of First Nations would be structured and operate The Chiefs held their first assembly as the Assembly of First Nations AFN in Penticton British Columbia in April 1982 The new structure gave membership and voting rights directly to individual chiefs representing First Nations rather than to representatives of their provincial territorial organizations 9 10 This structure was adopted in July 1985 as part of the Charter of the Assembly of First Nations Public perceptions EditThe AFN depends upon the federal government for most of its funding First Nations activists have sometimes accused it of being obsequious to the government as a result and not sufficiently representative of the larger First Nations community 11 But there is also widespread Indigenous support for continued operation of the AFN 12 In early 2013 the press reported that documents revealed that the AFN had been operating together with the Royal Canadian Mounted Police RCMP to provide information and conduct surveillance on members of First Nations communities This was in response to their joint concerns over disruptions due to mass protests over issues of sovereignty land claims and related tensions Reporters acquired the documents through access to information requests The Star reported that heads of the RCMP and of the Ontario and Quebec provincial police met in the summer of 2007 with AFN national chief Phil Fontaine to facilitate a consistent and effective approach to managing Aboriginal protests and occupations 13 Principal organs EditNational Chief elected for a three year term First Nations in Assembly The Executive Committee National Chief and regional chiefs from each province and territory Secretariat Advisory councils Council of Elders Women s Council Youth Council Veterans Council 2SLGBTQQIA Presidents of the National Indian Brotherhood Edit1968 1970 Walter Dieter 1970 1976 George Manuel 1976 1980 Noel Starblanket 1980 1982 Delbert RileyNational Chiefs of the Assembly of First Nations Edit1982 1985 David Ahenakew 1985 1991 Georges Erasmus 1991 1997 Ovide Mercredi 1997 2000 Phil Fontaine 2000 2003 Matthew Coon Come 2003 2009 Phil Fontaine 2009 2014 Shawn Atleo 2014 Ghislain Picard interim 14 2014 2021 Perry Bellegarde 2021 2023 RoseAnne Archibald 15 2023 present Joanna Bernard interim See also Edit nbsp Indigenous peoples of the Americas portal nbsp Canada portalAssembly of First Nations leadership conventions Congress of Aboriginal Peoples Assembly of First Nations Quebec LabradorReferences Edit Consolidated Statement of Revenue and Expenses PDF AFN Executive Committee Reports Archived from the original PDF on 2009 11 02 a b Assembly of First Nations The Story Archived 2009 08 02 at the Wayback Machine McFarlane Peter 1993 Brotherhood to nationhood George Manuel and the making of the modern Indian movement Toronto Between the Lines ISBN 0921284667 First Nations Bill C 44 PDF The Assembly of First Nations Posluns Michael 23 July 2007 Congress of Aboriginal Peoples The Canadian Encyclopedia Retrieved 24 April 2021 Pound Richard W 2005 Fitzhenry and Whiteside Book of Canadian Facts and Dates Fitzhenry and Whiteside A Brief History of the Education of First Nations Children What Should They Learn and How Should They Learn it Iram Khan Tester Frank James McNicoll Paule Forsyth Jessie Spring 1999 With an ear to the ground The CCF NDP and aboriginal policy in Canada 1926 1993 Journal of Canadian Studies 34 52 74 doi 10 3138 jcs 34 1 52 S2CID 140481114 Archived from the original on 2007 07 06 The New order of government Saskatchewan Indian 12 4 30 32 May 1982 First Nations Assembly Saskatchewan Indian No v12 n04 p26 May 1982 Archived from the original on 2015 08 09 Retrieved 28 November 2019 Watts Vanessa King Hayden 2018 07 26 After AFN national chief election apathy and resignation remain The Globe and Mail Retrieved 2019 10 27 Kinew Wab 2014 05 07 Why Canada Still Needs the Assembly of First Nations HuffPost Canada Retrieved 2019 10 27 Assembly of First Nations RCMP co operated on response to mass protests in 2007 The Star thestar com 15 February 2013 Retrieved 2019 03 03 Quebec regional Chief Picard takes interim AFN helm APTN National News July 16 2014 RoseAnne Archibald ousted as AFN National Chief following investigation into her leadership CTVNews 2023 06 28 Retrieved 2023 06 29 External links Edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Assembly of First Nations Assembly of First Nations Continuing Negotiations First Nations and the State Historical essay illustrated with photographs drawings and artifacts Assembly of First Nations Canadian Political Parties and Political Interest Groups Web Archive created by the University of Toronto Libraries Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Assembly of First Nations amp oldid 1179601098, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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