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B.C. Benefits Whom?: Motherhood, Poverty, and Social Assistance Legislation in British Columbia
Building on Her Legacy of Leadership
Recounts the achievements of Wendy Grant-John, the recipient of the 2006 National Aboriginial Achievement Award for community development.
Entire issue on one pdf. To access article scroll to p.19.
Dangerous Order: Globalization, Canadian Cities, and Street-Involved Sex Work
Detailed Plan of Action Comes Out of FMM [First Ministers' Meeting]
Prime Minister Paul Martin met with premiers and Aboriginal leaders to discuss plans to improve health, education, housing, and economic opportunities for Aboriginal people in Canada.
Entire issue on one pdf. To access article scroll to p.16.
From Ciudad Juárez to the Highway of Tears: These Aboriginal Women Murdered with Complete Impunity
From the Fur Trade to Free Trade: Forestry and First Nations Women in Canada
Government of British Columbia Submission to the
National Inquiry into Missing and Murdered Indigenous Women and Girls
Indian Record (Vol. 35, #7-8, [9-10], September-October, 1972)
Legacy of Residential Schools: Missing and Murdered Aboriginal Women
Missing and Murdered Aboriginal Women and Girls in British Columbia and Canada
The Missing Women's Commission of Inquiry
Murders and Disappearances of Aboriginal Women and Girls in Canada
Nothing to Report: A Report on Progress in Implementing Priority Recommendations made by the Committee in its 2008 Concluding Observations on Canada
On the Edge of Empire: Gender, Race, and the Making of British Columbia, 1849-1871
Out of Sight, Out of Mind: Gender, Indigenous Rights, and Energy Development in Northeast British Columbia, Canada
Paradoxes and Contradictions in Health Policy Reform: Implications for First Nations Women
Responding to the Homeless Crisis
Revelatory Protest, Deliberative Exclusion, and the BC Missing Women Commission of Inquiry: Bridging the Mirco/Macro Divide
Royal Commission on Aboriginal Peoples 140: Highliner Inn, Prince Rupert, British Columbia
Royal Commission on Aboriginal Peoples 45: Stoney Creek, British Columbia
Royal Commission on Aboriginal Peoples: Discussion by Brenda Wesley
Royal Commission on Aboriginal Peoples: Discussion by Florence Hackett
Royal Commission on Aboriginal Peoples: Discussion Paper by Jane Gottfriedson
Royal Commission on Aboriginal Peoples: Discussion Paper by Nancy Van Heest
Royal Commission on Aboriginal Peoples: Presentation by Debbie Foxcraft, Manager USMA Nuu-Chah-Nulth Housing and Related Infrastructure
Royal Commission on Aboriginal Peoples: Presentation by Irene Willard and Closing Remarks
Royal Commission on Aboriginal Peoples: Presentation by Native Outpatient Centre, Meysncut Counselling Centre, Sara Williams, Jane Caprion
Royal Commission on Aboriginal Peoples: Presentation by Sharron Simpson, Chairman, Central Okanagan Regional District
Royal Commission on Aboriginal Peoples: Presentations by Rena Kinney, Geraldine Thomas, Rosalind Caldwell, Lillian George and Betty Ann Barnes
Royal Commission on Aboriginal Peoples: Round Table Panel Discussion
Services for Sex Trade Workers Need More Support
Discusses how programs that aid sex trade workers require continued government support in order to maintain the much needed services.
Entire issue on one pdf. To access article scroll to p.22.
Special Supplement on Murdered and Missing Indigenous Women in British Columbia: Group Submission to the Human Rights Committee on the Occasion of the Consideration of the Sixth Periodic Report of Canada Submitted June 5th, 2015
Gives background to the issue, discusses the reports produced by the Missing Women Commission of Inquiry, Human Rights Watch, Inter-American Commission on Human Rights, and United Nations Committee on the Elimination of Discrimination against Women, and reports on the response of the federal and provincial governments.
Stopping Violence Against Aboriginal Women: A Summary of Root Causes, Vulnerabilities and Recommendations from Key Literature
Transition House Lays Groundwork for Healthy Communities
Tsimshian Involvement in the Forest Sector
Recommended for Grade 10-11 Social Studies and First Nations Studies.