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- Q2882257 subject Q8460309.
- Q2882257 abstract "Template:ForIn Canada, an Indian band or band, sometimes styled as a First Nation band or simply a First Nation, is the basic unit of government for those peoples subject to the Indian Act (i.e. Status Indians or First Nations). Bands are typically small groups of people: the largest in the country, the Six Nations of the Grand River First Nation had 22,294 members in September 2005, and many have a membership below 100 persons. Each First Nation is typically represented by a band council chaired by an elected chief, and sometimes also a hereditary chief. As of 2013 there were 614 bands in Canada. Membership in a band is controlled in one of two ways: for most bands, membership is obtained by becoming listed on the Indian Register maintained by the government. As of 2013 there were 253 First Nations which had their own membership criteria, so that not all Status Indians are members of a band.Bands can be united into larger regional groupings called tribal councils. There is also another kind of organization called a treaty council or treaty association, which in most provinces represents signatory bands of treatied areas (though in most of British Columbia, which is mostly untreated, those bodies are for forming and negotiating future treaty claims). Another emerging type of organization in British Columbia are chiefs' councils, such as the St'at'imc Chiefs Council, which unites bands not included in tribal councils with those in tribal councils. Bands also typically belong to one or more kinds of provincial council or similar organization, and also the pan-Canadian Assembly of First Nations (formerly called the Native Indian Brotherhood), chaired by a leader elected with each band having one vote, rather than at large. Bands are, to an extent, the governing body for their Indian reserves. Many First Nations also have large off-reserve populations whom the band government also represents, and may also deal with non-members who live on reserve or work for the band.Non-Status Indians, Métis, and Inuit people are not part of the system of band governments and reserves, and this is one of the major differences between their legal and social situation and those governed by band councils. The courts have ruled that constitutional reference to "Indians" (section 91(24) of the Constitution Act, 1867) applies to the Inuit (Re Eskimos 1939) as well as Métis and non-Status Indians (Daniels v. Canada 2013), but their relations with the federal government are not governed by the terms of in the Indian Act.".
- Q2882257 wikiPageExternalLink www.afn.ca.
- Q2882257 wikiPageExternalLink www.aiai.on.ca.
- Q2882257 wikiPageExternalLink www.ainc-inac.gc.ca.
- Q2882257 wikiPageExternalLink 02665mnc_e.html.
- Q2882257 wikiPageExternalLink www.anishinabek.ca.
- Q2882257 wikiPageExternalLink www.chiefs-of-ontario.org.
- Q2882257 wikiPageExternalLink www.fns.bc.ca.
- Q2882257 wikiPageExternalLink www.indigenous.bc.ca.
- Q2882257 wikiPageExternalLink www.nan.on.ca.
- Q2882257 wikiPageExternalLink www.tapirisat.ca.
- Q2882257 wikiPageExternalLink www.treaty3.ca.
- Q2882257 wikiPageExternalLink www.ubcic.bc.ca.
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- Q2882257 wikiPageWikiLink Q8460309.
- Q2882257 wikiPageWikiLink Q868884.
- Q2882257 comment "Template:ForIn Canada, an Indian band or band, sometimes styled as a First Nation band or simply a First Nation, is the basic unit of government for those peoples subject to the Indian Act (i.e. Status Indians or First Nations). Bands are typically small groups of people: the largest in the country, the Six Nations of the Grand River First Nation had 22,294 members in September 2005, and many have a membership below 100 persons.".
- Q2882257 label "Band government".