Indigenous Peoples' Right to Self-Determination

Bok av Elvira Nurieva
The early history of indigenous peoples vis--vis settlers in Canada is the chronicle of extermination and assimilation. The followed decades of historic disenfranchise ingrained into the souls and minds of indigenous communities a feeling of skepticism towards the legislative bodies that formulated discriminatory laws against them. In the contemporary world, how to overcome this feeling of distrust and enable the indigenous political input into government operations? In the era of human rights and indigenous upsurge, how to achieve a thriving coexistence of indigenous and non-indigenous communities? Indigenous Peoples' Right to Self-Determination: the Relational Model of Self-Determination in Canada speaks about the interdependence of both communities and provides insights into a new model of their coexistence based on mutual recognition. A separate indigenous parliament appears to be such an amalgam model, an institutional arrangement that reinstates autonomy and ensures political representation of indigenous peoples at the federal level while upholding the system of checks and balances, the cornerstone of a Western-style democracy.