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Opinion: ItSA国际影视传媒檚 time for a constitution in the NWT

Instead of the GNWT granting roles to Indigenous groups, a new constitution could be rooted in Indigenous legal traditions.
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Hans Wiedemann is a resident of Hay River. Photo courtesy of Hans Wiedemann

In the NWT, the conversation about a constitution has long simmered beneath the surface. Yet, the time has come to bring it to a full boil SA国际影视传媒 not just any constitution, but one that boldly redefines the relationship between Indigenous nations and the GNWT.

This constitution must recognize Indigenous governments not as stakeholders or subordinate entities, but as equal or even superior partners in governance.

This isnSA国际影视传媒檛 a radical idea. It is a return to what was already in place before Confederation SA国际影视传媒 before the imposition of the Indian Act, the residential school system and the slow bureaucratic erosion of Indigenous sovereignty. The NWT is home to diverse and self-governing Indigenous peoples: Dene, Metis, Inuvialuit. These nations had complex legal systems, governing structures and spiritual relationships with the land for thousands of years before Ottawa drew lines on maps.

The GNWT: A colonial framework in Northern clothing

Despite the optics of inclusion and co-management, the GNWT remains, at its core, a colonial invention SA国际影视传媒 an administrative extension of Canada designed to oversee territory rather than to empower its original peoples. While devolution agreements have transferred power from Ottawa to Yellowknife, they have done little to transfer true authority to the rightful stewards of this land: the Indigenous nations.

A constitution offers the opportunity to flip this power dynamic. Rather than a GNWT-led government granting roles or rights to Indigenous groups, a new territorial constitution could start from Indigenous legal traditions, creating a framework where the GNWT operates with consent and oversight from the Indigenous nations SA国际影视传媒 not the other way around.

Inherent rights must mean real power

The Supreme Court of Canada and the Constitution Act, 1982, recognize the inherent right to self-government. But in practice, this right is watered down by slow negotiations, limited jurisdiction and continued dependence on federal and territorial funding mechanisms. What good is SA国际影视传媒渟elf-governmentSA国际影视传媒 if itSA国际影视传媒檚 micromanaged, underfunded or boxed in by GNWT policies that ignore traditional knowledge and local needs?

An NWT constitution should go beyond symbolic acknowledgements. It must establish:

-shared or rotational leadership models, where Indigenous nations lead governance cycles

-recognition of Indigenous laws as equal in force to territorial legislation

-a governing council composed primarily of Indigenous leadership, with the GNWT as one of many voices SA国际影视传媒 not the lead

This is not just about rights; itSA国际影视传媒檚 about rebalancing power after generations of displacement, broken treaties and colonial harm.

The path forward: Healing through jurisdiction

We cannot heal as a territory without first acknowledging that the current GNWT system was built on top of existing nations, not alongside them. True healing comes when we embed Indigenous worldview, stewardship and sovereignty into the foundations of governance.

We need a constitution not written in a boardroom in Yellowknife, but born out of sacred fires, Dene law lodges, and Inuit community consultations. It must reflect the values of the land, the Elders, and the treaties SA国际影视传媒 not the frameworks of OttawaSA国际影视传媒檚 bureaucracy.

Let the NWT become the first region in Canada to move beyond the Indian Act era and create a constitutional model where Indigenous nations are not absorbed into government, but are the government SA国际影视传媒 with the GNWT as a coordinating body, not the dominant force.

Conclusion: From co-existence to co-governance

The North has always been different. Our challenges are complex, and our history is unique. We have an opportunity to lead the nation SA国际影视传媒 and the world SA国际影视传媒 in forging a post-colonial constitution that honours the First Peoples not with flowery language, but with real jurisdictional power.

A constitution is not just a legal document SA国际影视传媒 itSA国际影视传媒檚 a moral compass. Let ours point toward justice, sovereignty and Indigenous resurgence.

The North is ready. The question is: Is the GNWT?

SA国际影视传媒擧ans Wiedemann is a resident of Hay River