In west.
Dene Suline First Nations primarily live in Alberta, Canada, with their traditional territories covering areas such as Lesser Slave Lake, Grande Cache, and surrounding regions. They are part of the larger Dene or Athabaskan group of Indigenous peoples in North America.
I personally know some First Nations people and asked this. They said they do not need to immigrate as they consider themselves part of both USA and Canada.
Canada was the first country to be created by legislation. The pre-Confederation Province of Canada was a self-governing British colony. Confederation occurred on July 1, 1867, when the Province of Canada was divided into Ontario and Quebec. They joined with the colonies of New Brunswick and Nova Scotia to form a new independent nation: Canada.
the larger part of Canada's population live in the southern part mainly in Ontario.
This is because Utah rebelled against Canada which is why the league of nations wasn't part of world war 1
They lived in the south west of Canada
nickel back lives in canada
Canada
ICAO is a part of the United Nations and it's headquarters are in Montreal, Canada.
Indians mostly live in India, but they also live in many places around the world.
They live in Albertan part of the Rocky mountains
The answer to that has yet to be discussed and voted on by Canadians. For now it is an agreement of several Nations, some provincial, some cultural, to join in a Confederation, originally to hold off the Americans. For some the Confederation has given them power and they want Canada to take as much power from the provinces and Nations as they can. For them Canada's Confederation it is a Federation without Nations, a decentralized Federation at most. They will downplay anything that suggests a Confederation and emphasize anything that centralizes power in the the Federal System. They are succeeding, in large part because most Canadians are now First or Second Generation and as such identify with Canada, not the part of the Confederation they moved to and live in. Few people in the world see Canada as a Nation of Nations, a Confederation. Most outside Canada think it is one Nation, that Canada owns "it's" resources, that Canada builds it's infrastructure and it's cities. Of course Canada, the federal government, does everything it can to promote those ideas. If the Canadians, the First and Second generation majority accept such ideas, and for the most part they do, Canada's Confederation will become a Federation, with all significant power vested in the Federal system. It isn't there yet because there are still Canadians with their own history to tell but that is changing. Our Confederation is ever changing, even if our documents do not.