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MQUP congratulates Thomas J. Courchene on being awarded the 2018/2019 Donnor Prize for his book Indigenous Nationals, Canadian Citizens: From First Contact to Canada 150 and Beyond. Courchene is professor emeritus in the School of Policy Studies and an adjunct professor in the economics department at Queen’s University. This is his second Donner Prize win—he was the first winner of the prize in 1998.
The Donner Prize encourages and celebrates excellence in public policy writing by Canadians and recognizes the role good public policy plays in the well-being of Canadians and this country’s success. In their deliberation, the jury referred to Indigenous Nationals, Canadian Citizens as “a masterful work on one of the most important themes of our country’s public policy history.” The book is published by the Institute of Intergovernmental Relations, School of Policy Studies, Queen’s University and is part of the Queen’s Policy Studies Series.
Indigenous Nationals, Canadian Citizens begins with a detailed policy history from first contact to the Sesquicentennial with major emphasis on the evolution of Canadian policy initiatives relating to Indigenous peoples. This is followed by a focus on the key Supreme Court decisions that have dramatically enhanced Indigenous peoples’ legal and constitutional rights. Attention is then directed to the Truth and Reconciliation Commission and the associated “Calls to Action,” including their relationship to the United Nations Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples.
With this as backdrop the focus turns to envisioning a brighter future for First Peoples beginning with the adoption of an analytical framework. After rejecting Indigenous nationals, Indigenous citizens (the traditional AFN position) and Canadian nationals, Canadian citizens (the Chrétien-Trudeau White Paper proposal), the chosen framework is Indigenous nationals, Canadian citizens. The two penultimate chapters address the manner in which this model has been successfully applied to the 14 Yukon First Nations as well as to the four Inuit land claims agreements.
The final substantive chapter applies the Indigenous nationals, Canadian citizens model to the 70-plus First Nations in Saskatchewan (referred to as CSIN, the Commonwealth of Sovereign Indigenous Nations). In essence, CSIN would embrace provincial-type powers within, and closely integrated with, the province of Saskatchewan. Among other features, CSIN would embody the requisite degree of scale economies, self-government and property rights that are essential for Saskatchewan First Nations to successfully make the transition to Indigenous nationals and Canadian citizens.
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