They were not "first people". The first people in the areas in which first people live today were almost certainly not today's first people. There have been several waves of immigrants via the Bearing sea or Land and hundreds, even thousands of years of conflict within what is today Canada. The result has been hundreds and thousands of years of genocide and warfare and interactions of various peoples and nations.
Today they, and all of us have, in common is a tumultuous history. In the case of those of us in North America claiming to be first people we share a common path of Immigration.
The French. Or if you want to be really specific the Indians were there first.
No.
Cultural anthropologists
Collective rights recognize the founding people of Canada. Canada would have not existed without the contribution of these people It reflects the idea of mutual respect among people. the main purpose of collective rights is to affirm the collective identity of groups in society and to create a society where people with different identities belong.
The second largest reported religious affiliation in Canada is "no religion" (after Christianity, the largest religion in Canada). The third largest religious affiliation and second largest religion is Islam.
inuit is one of them
In the main, they aren't citizens. Generally, they share little in common. They have no common culture, common language, common worldview, common territorial desires, common religious views, and common economic views. In short, they just happen to be two different groups of people who want the same land.
Groups of people of different race or religion.
that would be democracy; under democracy people are allowed to from different groups.
people from Scotland, Ireland and england
alliance...... from Canada revisited 7
Groups of people or countries that work together are called Alliance