Policy Sectors
Use this search tool to navigate through our various programs and policy pages.
Policy Sectors
Use this search tool to navigate through our various programs and policy pages.
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
December 7, 2022
Ottawa – The Native Women’s Association of Canada (NWAC) will ask the Supreme Court of Canada to “explicitly advance Indigenous women’s equality” as guaranteed in the Constitution in deciding a case related to the jurisdiction of the provision of Indigenous child and family services.
The Court must determine whether An Act respecting First Nations, Inuit and Métis children, youth and families, a federal law that came into force in January 2020 and affirms the rights of Indigenous peoples to exercise jurisdiction over child and family services, unjustifiably infringes on provincial jurisdiction over those services. The Quebec Court of Appeal (QCCA) has held that the Act is constitutional, and that regulating child and family services is a generic right that extends to all Indigenous peoples because self-determination is key to achieving reconciliation, which is an aim of Section 35 of the Constitution.
NWAC will argue that the Court must also interpret Section 35 of the Constitution in light of substantive equality guarantees for women, and that it should set a test to ensure that laws affirm and comply with those guarantees.
NWAC submits that the new approach to child and family services promoted by the QCCA must redress Indigenous women’s historic and systemic disempowerment, and it must advance reconciliation between Indigenous women and the Crown. It will also argue that this approach is required under Canada’s international human rights commitments including the United Nations Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples.
NWAC aims to affirm the constitutional rights of Indigenous women and 2SLGBTQQIA+ peoples to reverse their historic disadvantage under colonization and their ongoing harms as described in the final report of the National Inquiry into Missing and Murdered Indigenous Women and Girls.
For information, or to arrange an interview, contact:
Annette Goerner
annette@sparkadvocacy.ca
+1 (613) 818-6941
Pour obtenir plus d’information ou prendre des dispositions pour une interview, contacter:
Annette Goerner
annette@sparkadvocacy.ca
+1 (613) 818-6941
About The Native Women’s Association of Canada
The Native Women’s Association of Canada (NWAC) is a National Indigenous Organization representing the political voice of Indigenous women, girls, transgender, Two-Spirit, and gender-diverse people in Canada, inclusive of First Nations on and off reserve, status and non-status, disenfranchised, Métis and Inuit. An aggregate of Indigenous women’s organizations from across the country, NWAC was founded on the collective goal to enhance, promote and foster the social, economic, cultural and political well-being of Indigenous women within their respective communities and Canada societies.
À propos de l'Association des femmes autochtones du Canada
L'Association des femmes autochtones du Canada (AFAC) est une organisation autochtone nationale qui représente la voix politique des femmes, des filles, des transgenres, des bispirituels et des personnes de sexe différent au Canada, y compris les membres des Premières nations vivant dans les réserves et hors réserve, les Indiens inscrits et non inscrits, les personnes privées de leurs droits, les Métis et les Inuits. Regroupant des organisations de femmes autochtones de tout le pays, l'AFAC a été fondée dans le but collectif d'améliorer, de promouvoir et de favoriser le bien-être social, économique, culturel et politique des femmes autochtones au sein de leurs communautés respectives et des sociétés canadiennes.
Subscribe to our newsletter for the latest from NWAC, our events, partners and supporters. You can unsubscribe anytime.
© 2023 Native Women's Association of Canada