I would suggest strategies that specifically aim to provide them with their own identity would be far superior than those that are currently in place.
The treaty process
is a strategy to provide them with "their own identity" as well as a few other things like their own self government, their own lands, resources, etc. The current system was supposed to be a temporary system and supposed to clear the majority of Canadian lands for European settlement. The "Indian lands" were held in trust by the Canadian government to prevent their sale by unscrupulous land dealers. The natives were supposed to settle on the these lands, give up their nomadic hunting and gathering way of life and become farmers and assimilate into Canadian society. This was not intended to last hundreds of years.
It seems to be the attitude of the Canadian government that we give them autonomy. I would propose, perhaps somewhat blindly, that we strive to provide thorough integration of our respective societies.
Perhaps you could try to explain the difference between what you mean by "integration" and the former government policy of "assimilation" as it might help you to see the difficulty in this. It was, after all, the government's assimilation policy that led to some of the most atrocious of the atrocities committed against the First Nations (the banning of the Potlatch and other ceremonies, the residential schools and the emotional, psychological and physical scars that they left, and the loss of generations of oral traditions and language), not to mention the delay in the settling of the land claims themselves (for years Aboriginals were not allowed, under the law, to hire lawyers to advance their land claims). Trudeau tried to go the assimilation route in the White Paper of 1969<
http://www.ainc-inac.gc.ca/ai/arp/ls/pubs/cp1969/cp1969-eng.asp, which was couched in very liberal ideals and language, and spoke of leading First Nations "to the full, free and nondiscriminatory participation of the Indian people in Canadian society." The White Paper proposed to eliminate "the seeds of disharmony and disunity" in the Government policies which "prevent [First Nations] Canadians from fulfilling themselves and contributing to their society." Trudeau's Government was offering a "another road for Indians, a road that would lead gradually away from different status to full social, economic and political participation in Canadian life," and of this "choice" of road that was being offered, the Government felt the "Indian people must be persuaded, must persuade themselves, that this path will lead them to a fuller and richer life." Keep in mind here, that while it sounds "liberal," Trudeau himself did not recognize Aboriginals rights (because, according to Trudeau, "no society can be created on 'historical might have beens'"), nor did he support that concept of self government for First Nations (one of his concerns with the treaty process was that, in regard to the transfer of services to the natives, that it created a requirement to give them status "on par with the government" (which is exactly what the First Nations wanted).
Unfortunately for the Government, and the rest of Canadian society, the First Nations did not agree. Their response to the change in policy was the
Citizens Plus, or the "Red Paper" <http://www.eric.ed.gov/ERICWebPortal/contentdelivery/servlet/ERICServlet?accno=ED056791>in which the Indian Chiefs of Alberta systematically dismantled Trudeau's argument for assimilation and asserted that there was "nothing more important [to First Nations] than [their] Treaties, [their] lands, and the well being of [their] future generations."