Going It Alone?: Prospects for Aboriginal Autonomy E-Books Author/Creator Raymond Firth Claude Lévi-Strauss Robert Tonkinson Michael Howard Ronald Berndt ... [et al.] Login or Register to create bookmarks.
Honouring the Kaswenta (Two Row Wampum): A Framework For Consultation With Indigenous Communities In Canada and Australia Theses Author/Creator Ashley Sisco Description Education Thesis (Ph.D.)--University of Wollongong, 2015. Login or Register to create bookmarks.
Miwatj and East Arnhem: Case Study: Prepared for the Miwatj Health Aboriginal Corporation and the Lowitja Institute Alternate Title Funding, Accountability and Results (FAR) Project E-Books Author/Creator Paula Myott Angelita Martini Judith Dwyer Description One of five publications that report on the work of the Funding, Accountability and Results (FAR) project. Login or Register to create bookmarks.
Negotiating Indigenous Modernity: Kungun Ngarrindjeri Yunnan - Listen to Ngarrindjeri Speak Articles » Scholarly, peer reviewed Author/Creator Daryle Rigney Simone Bignall Steve Hemming AlterNative, vol. 11, no. 4, 2015, pp. 334-349 Description Looks at unique ways Indigenous people are asserting their sovereignty in Southern Australia. Login or Register to create bookmarks.
A Question of Title: Has the Common Law Been Misapplied to Dispossess the Aboriginals? Articles » Scholarly, peer reviewed Author/Creator Kent McNeil Monash University Law Review, vol. 16, no. 1, 1990, pp. 91-110 Description Discusses the system of tenures at the time of settlement and how it was misunderstood to include Aboriginal occupied land. Login or Register to create bookmarks.
What Works in Effective Indigenous Community-Managed Programs and Organisations Alternate Title CFCA Paper ; no. 32, 2015 What Works in Effective Indigenous Community-Managed Programs and Organizations E-Books Author/Creator Sam Morley Login or Register to create bookmarks.
"Wolves Have a Constitution": Continuities in Indigenous Self-Government Articles » Scholarly, peer reviewed Author/Creator Stephen Cornell International Indigenous Policy Journal, vol. 6, no. 1, January 2015, pp. 1-20 Description Argues that most Indigenous nations, by their own traditions, are constitutionalists. Login or Register to create bookmarks.