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   Negotiations - Introduction

Contents

1. What are "Interest-Based Negotiations"?

Treaty negotiations involve a multitude of complex and competing public policy issues, many of which are intensified by the interconnections between communities and organizations in the urban setting.

It is often said that the BC Treaty Process is "interest-based". What this means is that the parties at the treaty table first identify a list of key issues for negotiation. Such issues include topics like land, resources and Aboriginal self-government. Under each issue, a number of interests are then identified. On the issue of land, for example, one interest of the negotiating parties is to ensure that privately-owned land is not available for treaty settlement.

In negotiations, there is sometimes a need to take defined "positions". Positions are specific proposals for or solutions to a given issue. In an interest-based process, the negotiators try to "look under" the positions to determine the underlying interests of the parties and the rationale for their concerns.

Key Terms Used in Treaty Negotiations

  • Issue (also called "key substantive issue"): the general topic under discussion (e.g. lands, resources, governance)
  • Interest: the underlying need to be addressed. Interests can often be satisfied in more than one way. Interests can be identified by asking the question: why?
  • Principle: a primary or fundamental interest which ties together or binds all others. Principles are typically broad in scope (eg. treaties should uphold the Canadian Constitution).
  • Position: are specific proposals or solutions that can only be satisfied in one way


2. What Makes Urban Treaties Different?

There are numerous reasons why urban treaty agreements will be different from rural treaty agreements. The successful implementation of treaties in urban centres is complicated by a number of factors including:

  • complex network of existing government structures and management regimes;
  • numerous competing private interests;
  • unique economic development and land use considerations;
  • limited available Crown land for treaty settlements;
  • higher population densities;
  • an absence of past models to provide insight on how relationships with other governments may develop in the post-treaty urban environment.


In Canada, the United States, Australia and New Zealand - countries where there have been predominant Aboriginal rights movements - there are few existing precedents that can be utilized to assess the impacts of comprehensive urban treaty settlements or of local government participation in treaty implementation.

In short, treaties in urban areas will have a more visible impact on communities, and there will be a need to adapt urban treaties to the realities of the urban setting.

Lower Mainland First Nations Population Map

3. Role of Local Governments - LMTAC's Perspective

A review of Framework Agreements (Stage 3) across British Columbia reveals that many of the issues of interest to First Nations involved in treaty negotiations are also the responsibility and/or interest of local governments. There is a practical necessity for ensuring that local governments are integral part of treaty negotiations and post-treaty implementation.

Local governments in British Columbia are recognized as an independent, responsible and accountable order of government. While they share similar functions and responsibilities, the character of local governments is as unique as the communities they serve. Issues arising in one municipality or regional district are often markedly different from those arising in others.

In spite of their differences, local governments also share important commonalties:

  • Local government is the most accessible and responsive level of government, closest to its constituents, and often staffed by members of the community and local citizens. The importance of the role of the public (and of public processes) is a central defining characteristic of local government. Public involvement in local government activities includes well established decision-making and advisory processes, all of which are integral functions of local government.
  • Local governments are also the implementing arm of government, dealing with both hard (e.g. water, sewers) and soft (e.g. community centres, planning) service delivery issues. As such, local governments tend to be pragmatic and practical organizations that seek to develop and implement "on-the-ground" solutions to important community issues.

In sum, there is a need to recognize that treaties will be implemented at the local level and that day-to-day relationships in the post treaty environment will be between neighbouring Aboriginal and non-Aboriginal communities.

The successful implementation of treaties is inextricably tied to the direct participation of local governments in treaty negotiations and to the recognition by all parties that local governments are an important community-based form of public government, not a third-party interest.

 

 

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This page was last updated on December 22, 2010

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