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The First Nations Governance Act was a legislative initiative proposed by the government of Canada in 2002 to reform the country's Indian Act. Introduced by Robert Nault, then the minister of Indian affairs, it was met with opposition from several indigenous groups and, despite its name, was never passed into law. Chrétien's successor, Paul Martin, abandoned the legislation shortly after he assumed office in 2003. The act would have introduced a framework for First Nations to design new codes for elections, financial management, and administration. It would have also brought bands under the Canadian Human Rights Act.〔Allan Thompson, "Natives slam reform bill," ''Toronto Star'', 15 June 2002, A14.〕 Nault's stated purpose in proposing the legislation was to make native reserves more democratic and accountable.〔Jane Taber, "Nault seeks aboriginals' direct input in legislation," ''National Post'', 1 March 2001, A01.〕 He said that his proposals represented an "interim step towards self-government" and were a response to demands by indigenous activists who opposed secrecy and corruption in their communities.〔"Saskatchewan First Nations cool to new governance act proposed by Ottawa," 24 March 2001, 02:46; Rick Mofina, "126-year-old Indian Act 'gone' if legislation passes, minister says," ''National Post'', 2 January 2002, A04.〕 Nault also sought to have representatives of indigenous groups on the House of Commons committee that reviewed the bill.〔Jane Taber, "Nault seeks aboriginals' direct input in legislation," ''National Post'', 1 March 2001, A01.〕 Several chiefs across the country opposed the act, arguing that Nault had not undertaken proper consultations.〔Louise Elliott, "AFN-sponsored coalition asks chiefs to oppose First Nations Governance Act," ''Canadian Press'', 18 December 2001, 17:51.〕 Matthew Coon Come, then the leader of the Assembly of First Nations, argued that the legislation was grounded in the same paternalistic model as the Indian Act.〔Kim Lunman, "Coon Come urges natives to protest legislation," ''Globe and Mail'', 23 May 2002, A5.〕 Margaret Swan of Manitoba's Southern Chiefs' Organization said that indigenous communities were not opposed to greater accountability and transparency, but added that Nault had made a serious error in bypassing the elected leadership of these communities.〔Margaret Swan, "First nations seek simple solution," ''Winnipeg Free Press'', 20 February 2002, A15.〕 Nault acknowledged in late 2003 that the legislation would not pass.〔Bill Curry, "Nault concedes Native Bill will die," ''National Post'', 11 October 2003, A1.〕 In early 2004, Paul Martin formally announced that the legislation would be discarded.〔Kim Lunman, "Martin scraps bill to change Indian Act after natives staged angry protests," ''Globe and Mail'', 9 January 2004, A8.〕 ==References== 〔 抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)』 ■ウィキペディアで「First Nations Governance Act」の詳細全文を読む スポンサード リンク
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