The Gwichüin Tribal Council is a First Nations organization representing the Gwichüin people in the Mackenzie River Delta of the Northwest Territories. It was created in 1992 with the final ratification of the Gwichüin Comprehensive Land Claim Agreement with the Government of Canada. Negotiations to achieve a Final Agreement, and thus, Gwichüin self-government, are ongoing.
The Gwichüin people have been present in Alaska, Yukon, and the Northwest Territories since time immemorial. In 1921, chiefs and headmen representing the Gwichüin (then known as the Loucheux) population in the Mackenzie-Delta signed Treaty 11, but unresolved differences arose between the interpretation of aboriginal and treaty rights by the Gwichüin and by Canada, and many obligations were never fulfilled. To provide certainty and clarity of rights to land ownership, and to ensure various rights and benefits to the Gwichüin people, the Comprehensive Land Claim Agreement was signed as a modern treaty on April 22, 1992.
In September 2023, the Biden administration cancelled oil and gas leases in the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge, for which Bernadette Demientieff, executive director of the GwichâÂÂin Steering Committee, thanked the administration.
The Gwitch'in Tribal Council represents the four Gwitch'in communities in the Gwitch'in Settlement Area of the Northwest Territories, known as Designated Gwich'in Organizations (DGOs):
Gwitch'in communities in Alaska and Yukon are not members of the Gwitch'in Tribal Council.
Although not a full self-government, the Gwichüin Tribal Council has authority over planning and conservation within its jurisdiction, and exercises full ownership of various lands and organizations. These holdings include subsurface rights to certain parcels in the NWT, as well as the Gwichüin Development Corporation and Gwichüin Settlement Corporation. An additional Yukon Transboundary Agreement extends some of these rights into a part of neighbouring Yukon, provided that other First Nations in that jurisdiction are co-operated with.