Yes.
Where I'm from, “land back” has a different context. Where I'm from, our leaders are people who say we never gave up the land. We're not asking for our land back because we never gave it. In the work that I've been engaged with, and in the opportunities I've had to learn from our leaders, it's all about that relationship to land. It's about asserting and growing that indigenous world view that is based off of the idea we are in relationship to our lands and water and they are in relationship to us.
My understanding of “land back” is empowering and strengthening that connection to land. It's about asserting, and being in a position to assert, decision-making authorities over our lands and waters.