Genocide, Indian Policy, and Legislated Elimination of Indians in Canada

The primary objective of early Indian policy was to ensure the eventual disappearance of Indians – a goal which has not changed in hundreds of years. The registration provisions in the Indian Act will achieve this goal through entitlement criteria, which ensures legislative extinction after two gene...

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Main Author: Pamela Palmater
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: University of Alberta 2014-06-01
Series:Aboriginal Policy Studies
Online Access:https://journals.library.ualberta.ca/aps/index.php/aps/article/view/22225
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spelling doaj-4764e6e25f9241acbbe9e9be7d8b25a72020-11-25T03:19:03ZengUniversity of AlbertaAboriginal Policy Studies1923-32992014-06-013310.5663/aps.v3i3.2222522225Genocide, Indian Policy, and Legislated Elimination of Indians in CanadaPamela PalmaterThe primary objective of early Indian policy was to ensure the eventual disappearance of Indians – a goal which has not changed in hundreds of years. The registration provisions in the Indian Act will achieve this goal through entitlement criteria, which ensures legislative extinction after two generations of marrying out. This has resulted in two separate legal categories of federally recognized registrants: status and non-status Indians, where membership in one group or the other determines access to essential services, band membership and more. The denial of federal recognition to non-status Indians has also resulted, in some cases, in the erosion of Indigenous identity, culture and communal connection. Court-based remedies have done little to address these ongoing injustices and Canada has shown little interest in a significant policy change.https://journals.library.ualberta.ca/aps/index.php/aps/article/view/22225
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Pamela Palmater
spellingShingle Pamela Palmater
Genocide, Indian Policy, and Legislated Elimination of Indians in Canada
Aboriginal Policy Studies
author_facet Pamela Palmater
author_sort Pamela Palmater
title Genocide, Indian Policy, and Legislated Elimination of Indians in Canada
title_short Genocide, Indian Policy, and Legislated Elimination of Indians in Canada
title_full Genocide, Indian Policy, and Legislated Elimination of Indians in Canada
title_fullStr Genocide, Indian Policy, and Legislated Elimination of Indians in Canada
title_full_unstemmed Genocide, Indian Policy, and Legislated Elimination of Indians in Canada
title_sort genocide, indian policy, and legislated elimination of indians in canada
publisher University of Alberta
series Aboriginal Policy Studies
issn 1923-3299
publishDate 2014-06-01
description The primary objective of early Indian policy was to ensure the eventual disappearance of Indians – a goal which has not changed in hundreds of years. The registration provisions in the Indian Act will achieve this goal through entitlement criteria, which ensures legislative extinction after two generations of marrying out. This has resulted in two separate legal categories of federally recognized registrants: status and non-status Indians, where membership in one group or the other determines access to essential services, band membership and more. The denial of federal recognition to non-status Indians has also resulted, in some cases, in the erosion of Indigenous identity, culture and communal connection. Court-based remedies have done little to address these ongoing injustices and Canada has shown little interest in a significant policy change.
url https://journals.library.ualberta.ca/aps/index.php/aps/article/view/22225
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