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Collective rights are rights made for specific groups of people. These groups include First Nations, Metis, Iniut, Francaphone, and Anglaphone. These people are included in collective rights because they are the first settlers and peoples living in Canada.
The Indian Act attempted to generalize a vast and varied population of people and assimilate them into non-Indigenous society. It forbade First Nations peoples and communities from expressing their identities through governance and culture.
The numbered treaties covered the area between the Lake of the Woods to the Rocky Mountains to the Beaufort Sea. Similar to the Robinson Treaties, the so-called Numbered Treaties promised reserve lands, annuities, and the continued right to hunt and fish on unoccupied Crown lands in exchange for Aboriginal title.
The Metis are in the three Prairie Provinces Manitoba, Saskatchewan, Alberta as well as parts of Ontario, British Columbia, the Northwest, and the Northern United States. The rights of the Metis are Modern treaties, Manitoba act, and Canadas constitution.
The rights of the Metis
The Metis are part of the Modern Treaties, these treaties Indigenous peoples to rebuild their communities and nations on their own terms.
The 1870 Manitoba Act was a constitutional statute that created the Province of Manitoba. It gave the Métis most of what they asked for, notably responsible government, the status of province, bilingual institutions, confessional schools, and guaranteed property rights with respect to Indian lands.
The Inuit people are one of the original inhabitants of Canada. They used to live and still live in the Northeast of Canada. Across Inuit Nunangat (the place where Inuit Live) there are five treaties including self government, the Inuvialuit Final Agreement , the Nunavut Agreement , the James Bay and Northern Quebec Agreement.
Modern treaties are nation-to-nation relationships between Indigenous peoples, the federal and provincial Crown and in some cases, a territory. These treaties enable Indigenous peoples to rebuild their communities and nations on their own terms.
The Anglophones and the Francophones are the first english and french speaking people in Canada. They are the first settlers of Canada so they have their own collective rights. They are included in Canada's Constitution.
The rights of the Anglophones and Frankcophones
The Anglophone and Frankcophone peoples get the collective rights of Canada's Constitution. The Constitution rights include freedom of conscience and religion, freedom of thought, belief, opinion and expression, including freedom of the press and other media of communication, freedom of peaceful assembly, and freedom of association. These people's languages are also the two official languages of Canada.