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Boundary Waters Treaty Gap

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The Boundary Waters Treaty gap refers to what was left out when Canada and the United States built international water-management regimes, commissions, and legal frameworks that dealt with rivers and lakes as if Indigenous and Haldimand-type interests did not exist. Grand River issues and similar watersheds were often handled as purely federal–provincial or international matters, with no space for Mohawk riparian or Haldimand-based claims.

In Six Miles Deep terms, the gap is this: while Canada negotiated with the U.S. and built regulatory machinery for water use and hydro power, the original Mohawk refuge along the Grand River—the people Haldimand named—were not treated as stakeholders, let alone as beneficiaries. The “Boundary Waters Treaty gap” is shorthand for that blind spot: a whole layer of Crown–Indigenous and Loyalist rights left out of the design, creating today’s conflicts over dams, water quality, and riverbed control.

144 words

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About Benjamin Doolittle U.E.

listen to BLOODLINE

“Bloodline” follows the Haldimand Proclamation from its original promise to the present fight to have it honoured. The track moves through Crown grants, broken commitments, and the legal and political road back to enforcement, asking listeners to hear the Proclamation not as a relic of the past, but as a living obligation that still binds the Crown to the Mohawk Nation of Grand River.

Artist: One Way Current
Writer: Benjamin Doolittle UE
Producer: One Way Current
Publisher: Corn Press Publications
Affiliation: Six Miles Deep / Mohawk Nation of Grand River

Six Miles Deep