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Indian reserve
(redirected from First Nations reserve)

   Also found in: Wikipedia 0.12 sec.

Indian reserve

Area set aside for habitation by American Indian groups in Canada. In total, there are some 1,000 variously designated reserves in the country, half of them in the far western province of British Columbia.

Canadian native peoples organize themselves into ‘bands’ rather than tribes. There are around 500 of these, though not all have reserves. Various treaties and federal laws stipulate that the reserves are for the use of ‘status Indians’, who have chosen not to assimilate into majority society. Generally, reserves are much smaller than reservations in the USA; they remain, technically, Crown Lands, which are owned outright by the central government.



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? Mentioned in ? References in periodicals archive
 
The campaign chiefly focussed on the international scene, pointing out that one billion people lack access to safe water and proper sanitation, but it also included references to First Nations reserves in Canada.
William Commanda, or Ojigkwanong, to give him his Algonquin name, was born on 11 November 1913, on the Maniwaki First Nations Reserve in Quebec, about 100 miles north of Ottawa.
The northeastern Ontario First Nations reserve has been pushing to develop the dams for some time, and was able to appeal to the government once the market for electricity was privatized and the government announced its intention to buy power from private suppliers.
 
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