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The Benefits of Being Indian: Blood Quanta, Intermarriage, and Allotment Policy on the White Earth Reservation, 1889–1920
Comments on the Draft Nisga'a Treaty
Exploitation of American Indian Symbols: A First Amendment Analysis
Finding Solutions for the Legislative Gaps in Determining Rights to the Family Home on Colonially Defined Indigenous Lands
Hawaiian Blood: Colonialism and the Politics of Sovereignty and Indigeneity
Honouring the Queen's Flag: A Legal and Historical Perspective on the Nisga'a Treaty
Indigenous Peoples and Real Estate Valuation
Jurisdictional Responsibilities for Land Resources, Land Use and Development in the Yukon Territory and Northwest Territories; Book Four: Other Northwest Territories Federal Lands
Law Changed: Bands Can Tax Members
Bill C-36 to become law June 1998; provides option for First Nations to set their own on-reserve tax regimes. Kamloops Indian Band intends to set a 7 per cent tax on-reserve through an agreement with Revenue Canada.
Entire issue on one pdf. To access article scroll to p.1.
Mackenzie Valley Resource Management Act (1998, c. 25 )
Matrimonial Real Property on Reserve in Canada
Research paper discusses the Indian Act, provincial family laws, traditional Aboriginal property rights, and divorces.
Related Material: Fact Sheet.
Matrimonial Real Property Solutions
Our Culture: Our Future: Report on Australian Indigenous Cultural and Intellectual Property Rights
Red Earth and Shoal Lake Cree Nations Quality of Reserve Lands Inquiry
Report by the Native Women’s Association of Canada on the Occasion of the Review of the Sixth and Seventh Reports of Canada on Its Compliance with the Convention on the Elimination of All Forms of Discrimination against Women
Six Miles Deep: Land Rights of the Six Nations of the Grand River
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.