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Aboriginal Children and Child Welfare Policies
Affirming Identity Through Musical Performance in a Canadian Arctic Hamlet
A Beacon on South Huntington: North American Indian Center of Boston Serves New England's Native Community
Beyond Survival: 'Stories of Queer Native Survivance' in Selected Works by Kent Monkman
Canada's Disgrace: Our Missing Aboriginal Women
Canada's International Human Rights Obligations and the Tragedy of Missing and Murdered Aboriginal Women
Charlie Wenjack and the Indian Residential School System
Christi Belcourt Q & A: On Walking With Our Sisters
Coming Home
Contesting Tradition: Inuk Vocalist Tanya Tagaq
Conversations About Historical Trauma: Part Three
Creating Pathways to a Better Life
Cree Indians in North-Eastern Saskatchewan
Decolonizing the Person, the Image, and the Collective Global Psyche Through the Lens of Silvia Rivera Cusicanqui
Depictions of Success: Voices From Grade 12 Aboriginal Students
“Each has a house of her own”: Purpose, Domesticity and
Agency of First Nations Women in Canada’s Industrial School
System, 1883-1923
The Edwin Brooks Letters: Part II
Brooks moved from eastern Canada to what is now Indian Head in the spring of 1882; went into partnership in with George P. Murray to form Murray and Brooks, General Merchants, 1883. In 1885 he sat on the jury that found Louis Riel Guilty of High Treason. Letters contain some commentary on local Indigenous peoples, events and settler-Indigenous and government-Indigenous relations. Entire issue on one pdf file, scroll to page 30
The Edwin Brooks Letters: Part III
Brooks moved from eastern Canada to what is now Indian Head in the spring of 1882; went into partnership in with George P. Murray to form Murray and Brooks, General Merchants, 1883. In 1885 he sat on the jury that found Louis Riel Guilty of High Treason. Letters contain some commentary on local Indigenous peoples, events and settler-Indigenous and government-Indigenous relations. Entire issue on one pdf file, scroll to page 67.