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Respecting Aboriginal Values & Environmental Needs
Charitable organization in Canada From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
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Respecting Aboriginal Values and Environmental Needs (RAVEN) is a charitable organization that works with First Nations across Canada to raise funds to assist Indigenous Peoples in enforcing their rights and title in court to protect their territories.
A major contributor to this article appears to have a close connection with its subject. (April 2023) |
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Indigenous Peoples in Canada have some of the most powerful environmental rights in the world—but only if they can afford to uphold them in court. A registered Canadian charity (#85484 0147 RR0001) and a US 501(c)(3) organization (EIN 98-0628334), RAVEN works to support Indigenous Peoples in enforcing their rights and title in court to protect their lands, sovereignty, and ways of being by partnering with First Nations bringing legal actions that seek redress for violations to Indigenous land and rights. Indigenous-led litigation is sparking transformative change across Canada, and every campaign we take on is an opportunity to redefine justice through setting legal precedents that aim to return stewardship and sovereignty to First Peoples. Through fundraising and public education activities, RAVEN is committed to advancing Indigenous rights and taking action for our shared futures by establishing environmental legacies.
Since 2009, RAVEN campaigning and fundraising activities have led to legal victories that have protected lands, sacred sites, upheld modern Treaty rights, stopped pipelines, and defended the land from open-pit mining. After fifteen years, RAVEN-supported cases have been cited over 370 times in other court cases, contributing to systemic change that addresses the climate crisis by honouring the right to free, prior, and informed consent by all Indigenous Peoples in Canada. Together, we root into the power of movement building to actualize a future that upholds Indigenous laws and ways of being.
By supporting RAVEN, you are part of a movement that increases access to justice so that Indigenous Peoples can afford to assert their rights and reclaim environmental stewardship through litigation against colonial governments and extractive corporations. What is at stake for Indigenous Peoples is at stake for everyone: basic rights to clean water and abundant lands that support ecosystems for all life and for all generations.
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RAVEN raises legal funds to assist Indigenous Peoples in Canada who enforce their rights and title through the courts to protect their traditional territories. Since 2014, the legal actions funded resulted in the quashing of the approval of the Enbridge Northern Gateway pipeline; protection of 83% of the Peel Watershed in the Yukon; halting of mining developments at Teztan Biny (Fish Lake), and T’ak Tl’ah Bin (Morrison Lake); and the cancellation of the Petronas Pacific Northwest LNG project at the mouth of the Skeena River.[citation needed]
Projects the organization has helped to support include:
- Challenges against oil and gas companies: Beaver Lake Cree Nation[3] taking on Alberta and Canada; the Wet’suwet’en[4] legal challenge to stop the Coastal GasLink pipeline through their territory (Central Coast, BC); Heiltsuk Nation’s civil action[5] against US-based Kirby Corporation, British Columbia and Canada over a catastrophic diesel spill in the Great Bear Sea (north-central BC Coast);
- For rivers and rights in Treaty territory: Site C dam campaign[6] with West Moberly First Nations (Treaty 8, BC);
- Mining justice: Gitxaala Nation’s challenge to the BC Mineral Tenure Act[7] to protect Banks Island (North Coast, BC); Neskantaga Nation’s legal challenge to inadequate environmental review in the Ring of Fire mining region (Ontario); Tsilhqot’in Nation’s civil action[8] against Taseko Mines Ltd and BC.
The organization uses crowdfunding to raise money.[9]
RAVEN created "Home on Native Land", a virtual class on environmental justice issues, Canadian history, and Indigenous law.[10] Employing humor as a tool, the ten-video course features comedian Ryan McMahon (Couchiching Anishinaabe).[10]
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