The Confederacy of Mainland Mi’kmaq (Dispute Resolution / ADRA)

THE CONFEDERACY OF MAINLAND MI’KMAQ of Nova Scotia Community-Based Dispute Resolution on Mi’kmaw Terms (ADRA Project) Basic & Advanced Project Management Training, 2025

WHO THEY ARE?

The Confederacy of Mainland Mi’kmaq (CMM) is a Tribal Council that
supports eight Mi’kmaw communities across mainland Nova Scotia,
advancing self-determination through programs and advisory services
designed on Mi’kmaw terms. Incorporated in 1986, CMM’s mandate is
practical and values-driven: equip communities with institutions that are
transparent, accountable, and anchored in teachings such as Netukulimk
and Etuaptmumk (Two-Eyed Seeing)—so decisions are fair, culturally
grounded, and made close to community.

Through its Governance department and in-house Legal Services, CMM
helps Chiefs, Councils, and administrators navigate legislative change,
develop bylaws and elections frameworks, and translate complex legal
matters into plain language. That steady, systems-focused work
strengthens the foundations required for clear resolution pathways and
appeal processes—support that keeps community control at the centre
while meeting modern legal and intergovernmental demands.

WHAT THEY NEEDED

CMM faced a clear gap: there was no independent, culturally grounded
way to review concerns arising from Chief & Council decisions. In
practice, the default recourse was Judicial Review in the Federal Court—
a formal, procedure-driven remedy designed to test legality rather than
to resolve disputes within the communities. For CMM, that was
compatible with Mi’kmaw ways of decision-making and accountability.

What was required instead was a community-defined “Alternate Dispute
Resolution/Appeal” (ADRA) framework—built on Mi’kmaw terms—with
arm’s-length independence from Council, clear scope and authority, fair
and transparent intake, and clear rules that people could trust. The
solution needed to sit comfortably within CMM’s existing governance
and legal capacities while reflecting the organization’s strategic
emphasis on transparency, accountability, and culturally anchored
systems.

Delivering this framework meant organizing a multi-year, cross-
department effort: aligning leadership and staff, coordinating policy and
procedures, and equipping the team with practical tools to manage
change and build confidence as the outcome of the project took shape.
The aim was straightforward—keep community control at the centre
while meeting legal realities.

WHAT WE DID

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Led a two-step engagement designed to build confidence first, then structure:

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Built communications and education components into the plan, including:

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Set a hybrid delivery approach tailored to the work:

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Worked collaboratively with the CMM team to shape a single planning framework for the initiative, including:

RESULTS WE GOT

CMM was left with a leadership-ready project plan that brought the work into clear focus, including:

Access and trust built into the plan by:

Decision-readiness strengthened through:

Risk management strengthened by:

IN NUMBERS

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1 independent review framework defined

Policy-aligned terms of reference and procedural rules positioned CMM to operate review and appeal on Mi'kmaw terms.

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4-phase delivery pathway defined

Mapped across 8 communities and 8 Chiefs & Councils to steer briefings and decisions.

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$325,054.69 baseline & $357,560.16 budget set

Including 15% contingency and 10% management reserve to guide a two-year rollout.