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Aboriginal Courts in Canada
Research paper looks at federal and provincial legislation, inherent Aboriginal rights and negotiated agreements, and different Aboriginal courts in Canada.
Related Material: Fact Sheet.
Aboriginal Title and Rights: Foundational Principles and Recent Developments
Aboriginal Title in British Columbia: Tsilhqot'in Nation v. British Columbia
Aborigines & Activism: Race, Aborigines & the Coming of the Sixties to Australia
The American Indian Movement’s Strategic Choices: Environmental Limitations and Organizational Outcomes
The Benefits of Being Indian: Blood Quanta, Intermarriage, and Allotment Policy on the White Earth Reservation, 1889–1920
Bill C-292, An Act to Implement the Kelowna Accord: Prepared for the Senate Standing Committee on Aboriginal Peoples, April 16, 2008
The Bridge-Building Role of Political Procedures: Indigenous Rights and Citizenship Rights Within and Across the Borders of the Nation-State
The Changing Legal Landscape for Aboriginal Land Use Planning in Canada
Comparative Governance Structures Among Aboriginal Peoples in Canada
Discusses the self-government issues of legitimacy, power and resources, by using examples of current agreements. The article breaks the areas down in terms of: basic principles, rights through treaties, federal-provincial division of power, status of lands, legislative powers, and funding.
Related Material: Fact Sheet.
The Crown’s Constitutional Duty to Consult and Accommodate Aboriginal and Treaty Rights
Deal? Or No Deal? Explaining Comprehensive Land Claims Negotiation Outcomes in Canada
A Deal's a Deal - Kelowna Accord 1 (National Chief Fontaine)
“Do Not Take Them from Myself and My Children for Ever”: Aboriginal Water Rights in Treaty 7 Territories and the Duty to Consult
The Draft for a Nordic Saami Convention
Finding Solutions for the Legislative Gaps in Determining Rights to the Family Home on Colonially Defined Indigenous Lands
The Fourteen Powers Referendum of 1944 and the Federalisation of Aboriginal Affairs
Hawaiian Blood: Colonialism and the Politics of Sovereignty and Indigeneity
Human Rights Act Seen as Threat
The Indian Act and the Future of Aboriginal Governance in Canada
Indigenous Peoples and Real Estate Valuation
Indigenous Peoples, Conflict Resolution and Reconciliation
Indigenous Peoples’ Land And Resource Rights
The Jurisprudence of Reconciliation: Aboriginal Rights in Canada
Lubicon Court Actions, 1973-1988
Matrimonial Real Property Solutions
Métis Law Summary 2008
Modernizing Ontario’s Mining Act : Finding A Balance - Discussion Paper
Native Nationality and the Contemporary Queer: Tradition, Sexuality, and History in Drowning in Fire
Oka: A Convergence of Cultures and the Canadian Forces
The Paradox of Sovereignty: Contingencies of Meaning in American Indian Treaty Discourse
The Qoliqoli in Town: Traditional Fishing Grounds and Squatting in Urban Fiji
Research Bibliography for American Indian Studies
Research on Best Practices for the Implementation of the Principles of ILO Convention No. 169: Case Study: 7
Resource Revenue Deal With Aboriginals Overdue
Responses of Canada to the List of Issues and Questions with Regard to the Consideration of Canada's Sixth and Seventh Reports on the Convention on the Elimination of All Forms of Discrimination against Women
Review of Changes to the Law Related to Forestry and Aboriginal Rights and Title
Sami Rights and Sami Challenge: The Modernization Process and the Swedish Sami Movement, 1886-2006
Sask. Indian Band Celebrates Treaty Land Deal
Six Miles Deep: Land Rights of the Six Nations of the Grand River
Specific Claims Tribunal Act: Statutes of Canada 2008, Chapter 22
Stealing Fire, Scattering Ashes: Anishinaabe Expressions of Sovereignty, Nationhood, and Land Tenure in Treaty Making With the United States and Canada, 1785-1923
Still a Matter of Rights: a Special Report of the Canadian Human Rights Commission on the Repeal of Section 67 of the Canadian Human Rights Act
Taiaiake Alfred on His Indigenous Manifesto
Teacher Guide for High School for Use with the Educational DVD Contemporary Voices along the Lewis & Clark Trail
Film explores Tribal members' perspectives on traditional knowledge, history, the impact of early contact and westward expansion, the importance of language, and cultural continuity.
Three Strikes But Not Out: Judicial Losses and Women's Political Activism Ahead of the Charter
[To Sir Wilfrid Laurier, Premier of the Dominion of Canada: From the Chiefs of the Shuswap, Okanagan and Couteau Tribes of British Columbia, Presented at Kamloops, B.C. August 25, 1910]
Text of letter protesting the misappropriation of land, failure to create treaties, and the policies of the B.C. government. Site also includes information on laws and customs, historical and political context, and timeline from 1763 to 2009.