Nunavut "our land" in
Inuktut, is a territory with a public government and the homeland of Inuit in Canada's eastern Arctic. In 1993 a Nunavut-wide Inuit vote and the Canadian Parliament ratified the Nunavut Agreement. By April 1, 1999, when the Government of Nunavut and the Nunavut Territory was created, it represented the "largest comprehensive land claim settlement ever reached between a state and its Indigenous Peoples." By the late 1960s, young Inuit men and women were graduating from high schools and vocational training in
Churchill, Manitoba,
Whitehorse, Yukon, and Ottawa where they had opportunities to meet with other young people from different regions to discuss common problems and consider political change. As a result these young graduates founded two organizations in 1970. The
Committee for Original Peoples' Entitlement (COPE) was established in the western Arctic in response to exploratory oil seismic work on Banks Island in October, 1970 that threatened the subsistence of local trappers. In the eastern Arctic, the
Inuit Tapirisat of Canada (ITK) was founded in 1971. In 1973, the ITK initiated the
Inuit Land Use and Occupancy Project which used
land use mapping or counter-mapping methodologies, resulting in a three volume publication, based on research by a team of experts working closely with Inuit across Canada. According to Milton Freeman who oversaw the project, it "documented the total Inuit land use area of the Northwest Territories, then stretching from the Mackenzie River to east Baffin Island," to provide "information in support of the fact that Inuit have used and occupied this vast northern land since time immemorial and that they still use and occupy it to this day."
Hugh Brody worked on the project from 1976–78 as coordinator in the
North Baffin region. He also assembled an Arctic-wide account of Inuit perceptions of land occupancy, building a collage of Inuit voices from all the communities of the Northwest Territories. A September 5, 2018 report "Raising children" by the University of Calgary based Children First Canada and the O'Brien Institute for Public Health, wrote that Nunavut had the highest
infant mortality rate (IMR) in Canada — 17.7 per 1,000 live births, much higher than the Canadian average IMR of 4.7. The president of Nunavut Tunngavik Incorporated,
Aluki Kotierk, said she hoped this would "spark rage" at the dire living conditions of some Nunavummiut children. The report, which provided a snapshot of the health and well-being of Canadian children based on data collected by
Statistics Canada, the
Canadian Institute for Health Information (CIHI), the
Canadian Institutes of Health Research (CIHR),
Health Canada, the
Public Health Agency of Canada (PHAC), the
Canadian Pediatric Society,
UNICEF report cards and
Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD) reports, warned that Canada's IMR was higher than all other European OECD countries and compared to all OECD countries, Canada ranks 30th of 44. ==References==