Skip to main content

The Terms of Our Surrender Colonialism, Dispossession and the Resistance of the Innu: Abbreviations

The Terms of Our Surrender Colonialism, Dispossession and the Resistance of the Innu
Abbreviations
    • Notifications
    • Privacy
  • Project HomeThe Terms of Our Surrender
  • Projects
  • Learn more about Manifold

Notes

Show the following:

  • Annotations
  • Resources
Search within:

Adjust appearance:

  • font
    Font style
  • color scheme
  • Margins
table of contents
  1. Cover
  2. Title
  3. Copyright
  4. Contents
  5. Acknowledgements
  6. Terminology
  7. Glossary
  8. Abbreviations
  9. Maps
  10. Preface
  11. Part One: The Innu
    1. Chapter 1: Innu/Canadian Relations in their Social Context
    2. Chapter 2: The Innu Left to their Fate in Schefferville
    3. Chapter 3: Matimekush Lac John Today
    4. Chapter 4: Legacies of the Past: Barriers to Effective Negotiation
    5. Chapter 5: Racism
  12. Part Two: The Royal Proclamation and Questions of Trust Over Canadian Indigenous Land
    1. Chapter 6: Historical Background
    2. Chapter 7: The Personal Fiduciary Duty
    3. Chapter 8: Bending the Law to the Needs of Settlement
    4. Chapter 9: The Honour of the Crown, the Duty to Consult and the United Nations Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples
  13. Part Three: The Modern Treaties and Canada’s Comprehensive Land Claims Policy
    1. Chapter 10: The James Bay Project: ‘The Plot to Drown the Northern Woods’
    2. Chapter 11: The Malouf Judgment – Chief Robert Kanatewat et al. v La Société de Développement de la Baie James et al. et La Commission Hydro-Électrique de Québec [1974] RP 38
    3. Chapter 12: Negotiating the James Bay and Northern Quebec Agreement
    4. Chapter 13: The Aftermath of Signing the James Bay and Northern Quebec Agreement
    5. Chapter 14: The Comprehensive Land Claims Policy
  14. Part Four: The Innu Experience of the Comprehensive Land Claims Process
    1. Chapter 15: ‘All that is Left to us is the Terms of our Surrender’: Negotiations to Recover Lost Innu Lands
    2. Chapter 16: The New Dawn Agreement
    3. Chapter 17: The Position of the Innu who Live in Quebec
    4. Chapter 18: Construction and Protest at Muskrat Falls
  15. Part Five: ‘Citizens Plus’ or Parallel Paths?
    1. Chapter 19: Academic Solutions
    2. Chapter 20: Indigenous Solutions
    3. Chapter 21: ‘Citizens Plus’ or Parallel Paths?
  16. Appendix A Text of the Royal Proclamation
  17. Appendix B The United Nations Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples
  18. Bibliography
  19. Index
  20. Back Cover

Abbreviations

AFN

Assembly of First Nations

AIP

Agreement in Principle

CAM

Conseil Attikamekw-Montagnais

CF(L)Co

Churchill Falls (Labrador) Company

CLCP

Comprehensive Land Claims Policy

CCP/CLCP

Comprehensive Land Claims Process

DIAND

Department of Indian Affairs and Northern Development, subsequently AANDC, Aboriginal Affairs and Northern Development Canada, then INAC, Indigenous and Northern Affairs Canada. The Department is now divided into two bodies: CIRNAC, Crown–Indigenous Relations and Northern Affairs Canada, and ISC, Indigenous Services Canada

FPIC

Free, prior and informed consent

HBC

Hudson’s Bay Company

IBA

Impacts and Benefits Agreement

ICEM

Institut Culturel et Educatif Montagnais

IRS

Indian Residential Schools

JBA, JBNQA

James Bay Agreement, James Bay and Northern Quebec Agreement (full title)

LIL

Labrador Innu Lands

LISA

Labrador Innu Settlement Area

Nalcor

The Newfoundland Labrador Corporation

NEQA

North Eastern Quebec Agreement (the agreement signed by the Naskapi)

RCAP

Royal Commission on Aboriginal Peoples

TK, TEK

Traditional knowledge, traditional environmental knowledge

UCRA

Upper Churchill Redress Agreement

UNDRIP

United Nations Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples

Annotate

Next Chapter
Maps
PreviousNext
Copyright © Human Rights Consortium, 2021
Powered by Manifold Scholarship. Learn more at
Opens in new tab or windowmanifoldapp.org