Deck 7: Aboriginal Peoples in Canada: Repairing the Relationship
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Deck 7: Aboriginal Peoples in Canada: Repairing the Relationship
1
What event marked the beginning of Aboriginal policy in what was to become Canada?
A) The Royal Proclamation Act
B) British North American Act
C) The Indian Act
D) The Constitution Act
A) The Royal Proclamation Act
B) British North American Act
C) The Indian Act
D) The Constitution Act
A
2
Those who believe the problems in Aboriginal communities are the result of colonialism tends to define the situation in Aboriginal communities as a (n) problem?
A) Indian
B) Assimilation
C) Aboriginal
D) Canada
A) Indian
B) Assimilation
C) Aboriginal
D) Canada
D
3
What term describes the government policy initiative that tried to increase Aboriginal control over the administration of local issues?
A) Assimilation
B) Accommodation
C) Integration
D) Devolution
A) Assimilation
B) Accommodation
C) Integration
D) Devolution
D
4
The government has been slow in responding to the recommendations of the Royal Commission on Aboriginal Affairs. What grade did the Assembly of First Nations assign to the government for its responses ten years after publication of the 1996 report on Royal Commission on Aboriginal Peoples?
A) B
B) C
C) D
D) F
A) B
B) C
C) D
D) F
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5
In what year was the Indian Act passed.
A) 1876
B) 1901
C) 1919
D) 1951
A) 1876
B) 1901
C) 1919
D) 1951
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6
What expression describes the notion of "being Aboriginal" (i.e. a shared awareness of Aboriginal differences) as grounds for challenging the relational status of aboriginal peoples in Canada?
A) Red Power
B) Sui Generis
C) Aboriginality
D) Citizen plus
A) Red Power
B) Sui Generis
C) Aboriginality
D) Citizen plus
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7
Aboriginal policy has evolved through several stages. Which of the following is NOT regarded as a policy stage?
A) Integration
B) Genocide
C) Devolution
D) Conditional autonomy
A) Integration
B) Genocide
C) Devolution
D) Conditional autonomy
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8
What term describes the idea that the lives and life chance of Aboriginal peoples would improve if only they became 'more like us' (i.e. like the mainstream)?
A) autonomism
B) integrationism
C) conditional autonomy
D) assimilationism
A) autonomism
B) integrationism
C) conditional autonomy
D) assimilationism
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9
Generally speaking, Aboriginal peoples claims for self-determining autonomy and self- government in Canada are consistent with the model of "domestic dependent nations" in the United States.
A) Institutional
B) Municipality
C) Nation
D) Sovereignty
A) Institutional
B) Municipality
C) Nation
D) Sovereignty
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10
According to the 2006 Census, how many people reported having aboriginal ancestry, that is, some aboriginal origins in their genealogical past?
A) Just under 800,000
B) Approximately 1.7 million
C) Approximately 2.2 million
D) Just over 3.2 million
A) Just under 800,000
B) Approximately 1.7 million
C) Approximately 2.2 million
D) Just over 3.2 million
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11
Aboriginal proposals for renewing the relationship with Canadian society are discussed at three levels of engagement. Which of the following is NOT included in this list of engagement?
A) Taking aboriginal difference seriously
B) Addressing poverty and powerless in Aboriginal communities
C) Recognizing Aboriginal title and treaty rights
D) Promoting Aboriginal models of self-determining autonomy
A) Taking aboriginal difference seriously
B) Addressing poverty and powerless in Aboriginal communities
C) Recognizing Aboriginal title and treaty rights
D) Promoting Aboriginal models of self-determining autonomy
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12
In 2006, approximately what percentage of individuals self-identified as Aboriginal in Canada?
A) 5.8 per cent
B) 3.8 per cent
C) 9.0 percent
D) 1.8 percent
A) 5.8 per cent
B) 3.8 per cent
C) 9.0 percent
D) 1.8 percent
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13
Membership as status Indian is based on certain criteria. Which of the following is NOT a criterion for status Indian membership?
A) Cultural distinctiveness
B) Admittance to a general registry in Ottawa
C) Affiliation with one of 633 bands
D) Fall under the jurisdiction of the Indian Act
A) Cultural distinctiveness
B) Admittance to a general registry in Ottawa
C) Affiliation with one of 633 bands
D) Fall under the jurisdiction of the Indian Act
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14
What city in Canada has the largest Aboriginal population?
A) Winnipeg
B) Toronto
C) Thunder Bay
D) Saskatoon
A) Winnipeg
B) Toronto
C) Thunder Bay
D) Saskatoon
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15
According to the Royal Commission on Aboriginal Peoples, what is the single most important barrier that precludes improving the relationship of Aboriginal peoples to Canadian society?
A) Cultural differences
B) Poverty levels
C) Misguided government programs
D) A broken relationship
A) Cultural differences
B) Poverty levels
C) Misguided government programs
D) A broken relationship
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16
Debates over Aboriginal self-governance tend to focus primarily around the politics of ?
A) Jurisdiction
B) Statehood
C) Secession
D) Authority
A) Jurisdiction
B) Statehood
C) Secession
D) Authority
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17
Canada's constitution recognizes three major categories of Aboriginal peoples. Which of the following is NOT constitutionally defined as an aboriginal group?
A) Inuit
B) Status Indians
C) First Nations
D) Metis
A) Inuit
B) Status Indians
C) First Nations
D) Metis
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18
What expression describes the idea that, because of their distinctive constitutional status, Aboriginal peoples possess rights that differ from those of ordinary citizenship?
A) Sui generis
B) Post colonial
C) De facto
D) Devolution
A) Sui generis
B) Post colonial
C) De facto
D) Devolution
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19
According to Alan Cairns, what term describes the idea that Aboriginal peoples in Canada have the same rights as all Canadians as well as additional rights because of history and their constitutional status?
A) Aboriginal-Minus
B) Conditional autonomy
C) Citizens-plus
D) Devolution
A) Aboriginal-Minus
B) Conditional autonomy
C) Citizens-plus
D) Devolution
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20
What document formalized the federal government's commitment to normalize its relationship with Aboriginal peoples by introducing the principles of integration as Aboriginal policy?
A) The Indian Act
B) The Constitution Act
C) The White Paper
D) The Multiculturalism Act
A) The Indian Act
B) The Constitution Act
C) The White Paper
D) The Multiculturalism Act
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21
Aboriginal peoples are increasingly rejecting the colonial social contract that continues to inform their relationship with central authorities. Proposed instead is a social contract that emphasizes the importance of a power sharing partnership.
A) Post colonial
B) Pre colonial
C) Neo colonial
D) Un-colonial
A) Post colonial
B) Pre colonial
C) Neo colonial
D) Un-colonial
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22
According to studies by Cornell and Kalt, a sustainable level of Aboriginal economic development on reserves requires a solution.
A) Cultural
B) Political
C) Social
D) Economic
A) Cultural
B) Political
C) Social
D) Economic
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23
What label best captures the idea that Aboriginal peoples continue to control land and resources that they have occupied continuously prior to European contact and have not yet been formally and explicitly ceded to the Crown? Aboriginal .
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24
While a commitment to assimilation to solving the so called "Indian problem" reflects the logic of modernization, a commitment to autonomism as a solution reflects the logic of theories.
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25
Two types of treaty claims can be discerned. One is based on specific treaty claims, while the other involves treaty claims.
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26
According to the text, what model best describes a commitment to the principles of citizen-plus as a framework for solving the so-called "Indian" problem?
A) Autonomy
B) Assimilation
C) Accommodation
D) Absorption
A) Autonomy
B) Assimilation
C) Accommodation
D) Absorption
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27
What label best describes Canada's current Aboriginal policy? Conditional .
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28
Two types of treaty rights exist; one is based on specific claims to violations in existing treaties, while the other involves the creation of modern day treaties and is called
A) Aboriginal land title claims
B) Specific Land Claims
C) Sui Generis Land claims
D) Comprehensive treaty claims
A) Aboriginal land title claims
B) Specific Land Claims
C) Sui Generis Land claims
D) Comprehensive treaty claims
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29
According to Alan Cairns, what concept best describes a claim that aboriginal peoples have the same rights as all Canadian citizens, in addition to special rights because of their status as descendants of the original occupants? Citizen-
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30
The Act of 1876 defined the criteria for an Indian status, although it was not until 1951 that this Act defined who was an Indian.
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31
Passage of the Act in 1763 is thought to have inaugurated a new relationship between Aboriginal peoples in Canada and the British Crown.
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32
What term describes a shared awareness of Aboriginal differences as grounds for challenging the relational status of Aboriginal peoples in Canada?
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33
According to the text, the social contract that defines the relational status of Aboriginal peoples in Canada has evolved over time. Which paradigms (or models) best describes the current relational status. -colonialism?
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34
The Delgamuukw ruling confirmed the principle of (i.e. continuous Aboriginal ownership of land that had never been formally extinguished by treaty or conquest)?
A) Aboriginal Title
B) Self Determining Autonomy
C) Sui Generis
D) Citizen Plus
A) Aboriginal Title
B) Self Determining Autonomy
C) Sui Generis
D) Citizen Plus
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35
Canada is second only to as the country with the highest proportion of Aboriginal peoples to the non Aboriginal population.
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36
Passage of the Indian Act in 1876 symbolized a commitment to as official Aboriginal policy.
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37
Constitutionally speaking, the term Aboriginal peoples includes several legally distinct groups, including status Indians, Metis, and .
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38
The move to de-segregate Aboriginal peoples during the 1960s by transferring them off reserves into cities reflected a commitment to the principles of as government Aboriginal policy.
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39
According to the text, because the foundational principles of Canada's constitutional order remain largely undisturbed, what kind of colonial arrangement continues to underpin and inform Aboriginal peoples lives? -colonial
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40
What is the name of the government policy that emphasized the principle of transferring program responsibility from the federal government to the Aboriginal communities?
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