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Aboriginal Children: Maintaining Connections in Adoption
Aboriginal Peoples, Justice and the Law
Aboriginal Self-Government and the Urban Social Crisis
The American Indian in the Great War: Real and Imagined [Part One, Chapter Two]
The American Indian Movement’s Strategic Choices: Environmental Limitations and Organizational Outcomes
Black Lines, White Spaces: Towards Decoding a Rhetoric of Indian Identity
Challenges to Urban Aboriginal Governance
A City's Experience With Urban Aboriginal Issues
Co-existence in Cities: The Challenge of Indigenous Urban Planning in the 21st Century
Community Healing and Aboriginal Self-Government
Convergence and Divergence in North America: Canada and the United States
Culture as Property?: Some Saami Dilemmas
First Nations Perspectives of the Split in Jurisdiction
A Glass Half Empty: Drinking Water in First Nations Communities
Looks at current federal policy and suggests co-management and recognition of Aboriginal rights as forward approaches.
Chapter nine from Moving Forward, Making a Difference, vol. 1, which is also vol. 3 in the Aboriginal Policy Research series.
Originally presented at the second annual Aboriginal Policy Research Conference, 2006.
[Indian Association of Alberta]: Introduction
Indigeneity, Settler Colonialism, White Supremacy
Mapping the Legal Consciousness of First Nations Voters: Understanding Voting Rights Mobilization
Discusses the issue of electoral participation from the perspective of Aboriginal identity and what having the vote means to them. Chapter two from Voting, Governance, and Research Methodology edited by Jerry P. White, Julie Peters, Dan Beavon, and Peter Dinsdale. Originally presented at the third annual Aboriginal Policy Research Conference, 2009.
Métis Perspective on Self-Government
The Politics of Authenticity: Aboriginal Tasmanians and Liberal Governmentality
Urban Aboriginals and Self-Government
Water in Indigenous Communities
Topics include ownership of beds and shores, water rights, water quality, and enforcement of rights.