Reconciliation Discourse and Politics in Canada

New PRIF Report analyzes the Canadian Reconciliation Process and its current problems

The Bentwood Box, a tribute to all residential school survivors, was produced by Luke Marston,  commissioned by the TRCC in 2009 and is now located in the National Centre for Truth and Reconciliation in Winnipeg, Manitoba. © National Centre for Truth and Reconciliation Archives, Photograph: DSC_9038

The Bentwood Box, a tribute to all residential school survivors, was produced by Luke Marston, commissioned by the TRCC in 2009 and is now located in the National Centre for Truth and Reconciliation in Winnipeg, Manitoba. © National Centre for Truth and Reconciliation Archives, Photograph: DSC_9038

In 2015 the Truth and Recon­cili­ation Commission in Canada published a detailed report on the violent history of the resi­dential school system in Canada and recom­mended 94 Calls to Action (CtA) to help the Canadian government and society to redress this historical system of violence and confront their own settler colonial history. However, despite these CtAs and Prime Minister Trudeau’s commitment, only a fraction has been imple­mented seven years later. The author explores in a critical discourse analysis the political debate surrounding the slow imple­mentation, revealing constructive and destructive factors influencing progress. The report concludes with an imperative for key political actors to acce­lerate imple­mentation, consi­dering the urgency for Indi­genous communities facing discrimi­nation and systemic issues.

Rita Theresa Kopp is an associate researcher at PRIF and the Research Center “Transformations of Political Violence” (TraCe). She holds a MA degree in political science from Friedrich Schiller University Jena, and her final thesis formed the basis for this report.

Download (pdf): Kopp, Rita Theresa (2024): Easier Said Than Done: The Political Discourse About Indigenous-Settler Reconciliation in Canada, PRIF Report 1/2024, Frankfurt/M., DOI: 10.48809/prifrep2401