
Indigenous Cannabis Sovereignty in Canada: History & Rights
Long before Canada's Cannabis Act, Indigenous peoples cultivated, traded, and used cannabis as part of sovereign economic and healing traditions. Understanding Indigenous cannabis sovereignty requires understanding the legal, historical, and cultural context that mainstream media rarely covers.
What Is Indigenous Cannabis Sovereignty?
Indigenous cannabis sovereignty refers to the inherent right of First Nations, Metis, and Inuit peoples to govern cannabis commerce and regulation on their own territories, independent of provincial and federal cannabis frameworks. This right is grounded in constitutional protections, international law, treaty rights, and centuries of self-governance that predate the Canadian state.
The mainstream narrative about cannabis in Canada begins with the Cannabis Act of 2018. But for Indigenous communities, the story is far older and far more complex. Cannabis regulation is one facet of a much larger struggle for self-determination — the right of Indigenous peoples to govern their own economies, health systems, and communities.
The Legal Foundation
Section 35 of the Constitution Act (1982)
Section 35 of the Canadian Constitution recognizes and affirms existing Aboriginal and treaty rights. This is not a government gift — it is constitutional acknowledgment of rights that existed before Confederation.
"The existing aboriginal and treaty rights of the aboriginal peoples of Canada are hereby recognized and affirmed."
The Supreme Court of Canada has repeatedly interpreted Section 35 broadly, affirming that Aboriginal rights include economic rights and the right to engage in trade and commerce. In *R v. Sparrow* (1990), the Court established that Aboriginal rights cannot be extinguished without clear and plain government intention, and any infringement must be justified.
Cannabis commerce on Indigenous territory is exercised under this constitutional framework. When a First Nation operates a dispensary on reserve land, they are exercising an inherent right to economic self-determination that the Constitution explicitly protects.
United Nations Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples (UNDRIP)
In June 2021, Canada passed Bill C-15, which enshrined the United Nations Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples into Canadian law. Key articles relevant to cannabis sovereignty include:
Article 3 — Self-Determination:
"Indigenous peoples have the right to self-determination. By virtue of that right they freely determine their political status and freely pursue their economic, social and cultural development."
Article 4 — Self-Governance:
"Indigenous peoples, in exercising their right to self-determination, have the right to autonomy or self-government in matters relating to their internal and local affairs."
Article 5 — Institutional Development:
"Indigenous peoples have the right to maintain and strengthen their distinct political, legal, economic, social and cultural institutions."
Article 21 — Economic Improvement:
"Indigenous peoples have the right, without discrimination, to the improvement of their economic and social conditions, including in the areas of education, employment, vocational training and retraining, housing, sanitation, health and social security."
These articles collectively affirm that Indigenous communities have the right to develop their own economic institutions — including cannabis businesses — on their own terms.
Treaty Rights and Inherent Sovereignty
Many First Nations in Canada hold treaty rights that include provisions for trade and economic activity. The Haudenosaunee (Iroquois Confederacy), of which the Mohawk Nation is a member, have never ceded sovereignty through treaty. The Haudenosaunee governance system — the Great Law of Peace (Kaianere'ko:wa) — predates European contact and continues to govern Six Nations territory.
Mohawk Medibles operates under this framework of inherent Haudenosaunee sovereignty. We are not seeking permission from the Canadian government to operate — we are exercising rights that have existed for centuries.
Historical Context: Cannabis and Indigenous Trade
Pre-Colonization Trade Networks
Indigenous peoples across Turtle Island (North America) maintained extensive trade networks long before European contact. The Haudenosaunee Confederacy, in particular, operated sophisticated economic systems that included regulated trade, resource management, and inter-nation commerce.
While cannabis (hemp) arrived in North America via European colonizers, Indigenous communities quickly recognized its agricultural and economic value. Hemp was cultivated on reserves and Indigenous territories from the 1600s onward, used for rope, textiles, and medicinal purposes.
The Colonial Disruption
The Indian Act (1876) systematically dismantled Indigenous economic autonomy. It prohibited commercial activity on reserves, restricted movement, and criminalized cultural practices. For over a century, Indigenous communities were prevented from participating in the economy on their own terms.
This colonial economic suppression created the poverty that many reserves still experience today. Understanding this history is essential to understanding why cannabis sovereignty matters — it represents a path to economic self-determination after generations of imposed economic marginalization.
The Cannabis Act and Its Failures
When Canada legalized cannabis in 2018, Indigenous communities were largely excluded from the process:
This failure to include Indigenous peoples in the legalization framework left communities with two options: participate in a system designed without them, or assert sovereignty and build their own cannabis economies.
Many chose sovereignty.
The Economic Impact of Indigenous Cannabis
Revenue and Employment
Indigenous cannabis operations generate significant economic activity in communities that have historically been denied economic opportunity:
Direct employment: Dispensaries, cultivation facilities, and distribution operations create local jobs on reserves where unemployment rates have historically exceeded 50% in some communities.
Community revenue: Profits from Indigenous cannabis operations are reinvested in community infrastructure, youth programs, housing, health services, and cultural preservation. Unlike corporate cannabis profits that flow to shareholders in Toronto or New York, Indigenous cannabis revenue stays in the community.
Supply chain development: Indigenous cannabis operations create demand for local goods and services — construction, security, transportation, packaging, and more.
Comparison with Government Cannabis
The government-regulated cannabis market has struggled with profitability. Many licensed producers have gone bankrupt, and government retail stores in some provinces operate at a loss. Meanwhile, Indigenous cannabis operations have generally thrived, because:
Six Nations of the Grand River: A Case Study
Six Nations of the Grand River is the largest First Nations reserve in Canada, home to approximately 13,000 residents (with over 27,000 band members in total). Located in southern Ontario along the Grand River, Six Nations is the only reserve in North America where all six Haudenosaunee nations live together.
Cannabis on Six Nations
Six Nations has become one of the most prominent centres of Indigenous cannabis commerce in Canada. Dozens of dispensaries operate on the territory, creating hundreds of jobs and generating significant economic activity.
The community's approach to cannabis is rooted in self-governance:
Mohawk Medibles' Role
Mohawk Medibles has operated from Six Nations territory since 2019. In that time, we have:
Our name carries weight. "Mohawk" is not a brand identity — it is who we are. Every transaction with Mohawk Medibles is a direct contribution to Indigenous economic sovereignty.
Supporting Indigenous Cannabis Businesses
Why It Matters
When you buy from an Indigenous cannabis operation, your money does more than purchase a product:
1. Economic reconciliation — Indigenous communities were economically marginalized for generations. Supporting Indigenous businesses helps address this historical inequity.
2. Self-determination in action — every purchase validates the right of Indigenous peoples to govern their own economic affairs.
3. Community investment — revenue stays local, funding housing, health, education, and cultural programs.
4. Quality assurance — Indigenous dispensaries that have built their reputation on quality (like Mohawk Medibles) have strong incentives to maintain high standards.
5. Cultural preservation — economic vitality allows communities to invest in language preservation, cultural programs, and youth initiatives.
How to Identify Indigenous-Owned Cannabis Businesses
Beyond Cannabis: The Broader Sovereignty Movement
Cannabis sovereignty is one expression of a much broader Indigenous self-determination movement in Canada. Other areas where Indigenous communities are asserting economic sovereignty include:
Cannabis, while visible and sometimes controversial, is part of a larger story about Indigenous peoples reclaiming the economic autonomy that colonization took from them.
The Future of Indigenous Cannabis in Canada
The relationship between Indigenous cannabis operations and the Canadian government continues to evolve. Several developments suggest a path forward:
Government Recognition
Some provinces have begun engaging with Indigenous communities on cannabis governance, recognizing that a collaborative approach is more productive than confrontation.
Economic Growth
As Indigenous cannabis operations mature, they are building institutional capacity — from supply chain management to quality control systems to e-commerce platforms — that strengthens the broader Indigenous economy.
Legal Clarity
Court challenges and government negotiations are gradually clarifying the legal framework for Indigenous cannabis. Each decision that affirms Section 35 rights and UNDRIP principles strengthens the foundation for Indigenous self-governance.
Youth and Next Generation
Indigenous youth are growing up seeing cannabis operations as legitimate, professional businesses. This normalizes Indigenous economic sovereignty and inspires the next generation of Indigenous entrepreneurs.
Visit Mohawk Medibles
Mohawk Medibles operates from Six Nations of the Grand River territory — Canada's largest First Nations reserve. When you shop with us, you support Indigenous economic sovereignty directly.
