The Fight to Regain Indigenous Self-Determination in Canada: A Brief Reviso 1 Phil Henderson 1 Originally written in 2012, this article was published on two separate occasions in early 2013. The first being in the Social Contract, an undergraduate publication at the University of Western Ontario. Shortly afterwards, the Canadian Political Science Students’ Association published it in their annual journal Expressions. For this second publication the editors encouraged authors to take a hard look at their articles and submit any last minute revisions before publication occurred. Upon doing so I discovered that I had unwittingly appropriated many terms and underlying assumptions inherent in Canada’s project as a settler-state. I seized this as an opportunity to correct my errors and put forward a more accurate and forceful argument for indigenous nationhood. While I maintain the spirit of both the original paper and this revised version are the same, I will readily admit that the one which you are about to read more fully articulates my current understanding of the state of Canada-indigenous relations. The revisions are subtle, but those subtleties are enormously important: both to myself as an academic and an activist, as well as for the larger Indigenous Nationhood Movement. I hope that you will take these revisions into careful consideration as you read this article.