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The 1969 White Paper (officially entitled Statement of the Government of Canada on Indian Policy) was a policy paper proposal set forth by the Government of Canada related to First Nations. Prime Minister Pierre Trudeau and his Minister of Indian Affairs , Jean Chrétien , issued the paper in 1969.
The White Paper is also titled 1969 Statement of the Government of Canada on Indian Policy. [ 1 ] On January 22, 1970, the Indian Chiefs of Alberta sent a letter of concern addressed to Pierre Trudeau, in which they stated they had a first draft of a Red Paper counter-proposal and plan to complete the final draft in the near future, for ...
In 1969, Trudeau along with his then Minister of Indian Affairs Jean Chrétien, proposed the 1969 White Paper (officially entitled "Statement of the Government of Canada on Indian policy"). Under the legislation of the White Paper, Indian Status would be eliminated.
The term white paper originated with the British government, with the Churchill White Paper of 1922 being an early example. [4] In the British government, a white paper is usually the less extensive version of the so-called blue book, both terms being derived from the colour of the document's cover.
The result was a September 1969 paper that not only urged U.S. ratification of the Geneva Protocol but an end to U.S. BW programs. [2] Meselson and his colleagues argued that a biological attack would likely inflict a great toll on civilian populations while remaining largely militarily ineffective. [4]
In Place of Strife was a UK Government white paper written in 1969. [1] It was a proposed act to use the law to reduce the power of trade unions in the United Kingdom, but was never passed into law. [1] The title of the paper was a reworking of the title of Nye Bevan's book In Place of Fear.
1969 White Paper This page was last edited on 5 March 2019, at 22:51 (UTC). Text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 License ...
The Labour Secretary of State for Education Edward Short said in a speech to the National Union of Teachers in 1969: "In my view the publication of the Black Paper was one of the blackest days for education in the past century", [5] but ten years later the Black Paper proposals were "at the root of mainstream Labour and Tory policy". [6]