'Unceded territory' refers to land in
North America that was never ceded to a government entity by the Native peoples (the
First peoples of
Canada and
Native American tribes or nations) who originally lived on this land, and that has never been set apart, legislated, founded, created or established as a reserve. Some of these land claims were recognized by treaty with the
United States federal government although control was not actually handed over to the Native American peoples.
Native American and First peoples nations hold that such land rightly belongs to them under international treaties. Arguably, in some cases this could be true under U.S. law, since the
U.S. Constitution states:
For example, in 1980 the
U.S. Supreme Court awarded the
Lakota nation a settlement for the taking of the
Black Hills, land considered sacred by Native Americans, in violation of the
Treaty of Fort Laramie. The Lakota, however, refused to accept a monetary settlement and continue to demand that their ancestral land be returned to them.
Another specific case of unceded territory, is the province of
British Columbia, Canada. As apart of the
Royal Proclamation of 1763, which is still recognized in the
Section Twenty-five of the Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms, it required that the Government of Canada make treaties with each of the Indigenous nations over land as they expanded west. Except when reaching British Columbia, very few agreements were ever negotiated, and this left a legacy of unsettled land claims issues in British Columbia.
See also
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Aboriginal land claims
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Royal Proclamation of 1763
External links
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Map showing some unceded Indian territories (with reservations shown at their sizes as of the 1868 Treaty of Fort Laramie)
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Newspaper article detailing court dispute