I don’t have live tool access in this turn, but I can share the latest widely reported context about the National Inquiry into Missing and Murdered Indigenous Women and Girls (MMIWG).
Direct answer
- The National Inquiry into Missing and Murdered Indigenous Women and Girls released its Final Report in 2019, which included 232 Calls for Justice aimed at governments, organizations, and communities to address violence against Indigenous women, girls, and 2SLGBTQI+ people. This remains the central reference for subsequent policy work, advocacy, and public accountability efforts in Canada.[4][5][10]
Key recent touchpoints and developments (contextual)
- Government and Indigenous partners have continued to reference the Calls for Justice in national action plans and federal pathways, with ongoing commitments to implement reforms and address systemic inequities identified by the inquiry.[5][4]
- In 2024–2025, statements from the Prime Minister and federal agencies reiterated continued collaboration with provinces/territories and Indigenous communities to advance the Calls for Justice and explore mechanisms like public-mafety alerts and national action plans.[1][5]
- Media and advocacy organizations have highlighted gaps in progress five years after the Final Report, stressing that while some actions have progressed, many commissioners and families argue that systemic change has not yet fully materialized across Canada.[3][8]
Where to go for the most precise, up-to-date details
- Official government releases and backgrounders: search for the Final Report, the Calls for Justice, and the latest federal action plans on the Government of Canada’s sites (e.g., Crown-Indigenous Relations and Northern Affairs Canada, Women and Gender Equality, and related departments).[5]
- The Final Report and Calls for Justice: the official MMIWG site hosts the full Final Report and the Calls for Justice, which remain the primary reference for accountability and policy design.[10]
- Independent analyses and updates: reputable think-tank or international human rights organizations often publish summaries and progress assessments about implementation, which can complement official sources.[8]
If you’d like, I can pull the most current official statements and provide a concise update with direct quotes and a brief progress map (who is responsible for which Calls for Justice, and recent actions) with citations.