[Aboriginal Education: A Failing Grade]
Aboriginal Peoples in Canadian Cities: Transformations and Continuities
Aboriginal Relations: The Emergence of a New Paradigm
Aboriginal Workers; Aboriginal Labour and the Cattle Industry: Queensland From White Settlement to the Present; Indians at Work: An Informal History of Native Labour in British Columbia, 1858-1930
Anishinabek Perspectives on Resolving Rights Based Issues and Land Claims in Ontario
Banking in Winnipeg's Aboriginal and Improverished Neighbourhood
BC First Peoples 12: Teacher Resource Guide
Canadian Indian Cowboys in Australia: Representation, Rodeo, and the RCMP at the Royal Easter Show, 1939
Cold War Colonialism: The Serpent River First Nation and Uranium Mining, 1953-1988
Colonization, Racism and the Health of Indian People
Committee Proposal to Hire a Person to be involved in Areas which affect Native People
The Construction of Banff as "Natural" Environment: Sporting Festivals, Tourism, and Representations of Aboriginal Peoples
Crown and Aboriginal Occupations of Land: A History & Comparison
Dances with Dependency: Indigenous Success Through Self-Reliance
"Developing Indigenous Resources: Building Indigenous Economies"
Employment Equity Programs in Canada's Federal Jurisdiction
Ethnicity and Earnings: An Assessment of the White-Native Earnings Differential Among Males Employed Full-Time, Full-Year
Eukuan nin matshi-manitu innushkueu = I Am a Damned Savage: Tanite nene etutamin nitassi? = What Have You Done to My Country?
Final Written Submission: National Inquiry on Missing and Murdered Indigenous Women and Girls
Finding Our Way: Discussion Guide
Framing Canada's Aboriginal Peoples: A Comparative Analysis of Indigenous and Mainstream Television News
From Colonialism to Multiculturalism?: Totem Poles, Tourism and National Identity in Vancouver’s Stanley Park
Grade 12 Current Topics in First Nations, Métis and Inuit Studies: A Foundation for Implementation
I Dream, I Believe, I Am
Indian Coverage in Canadian Daily Newspapers, 1977: A Content Analysis
Indian Record (Vol. 34, #11-12, November-December, 1971)
Indian Record (Vol. 36, No. 3-4, March-April, 1973)
Indian Record (Vol. 41, Nos 5-6, May-June, 1978)
Indian Record (Vol. XXIV, No. IV, April, 1961)
Indian Record (Vol. XXVIII, No. 1, January, 1965)
Indian Record (Vol. XXXI, No. 9, November, 1968)
Indian Record (Vol. XXXII, No. 1, January, 1969)
Indian Record (Vol. XXXII, Nos. 10 and 11, October-November, 1969)
Indians at Work: An Information History of Native Indian labour in British Columbia, 1858-1930
The Indigenous—White Earnings Gap and
Labour Market Discrimination in Canada
Joint Submission to Expert Mechanism on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples: Study on the Right to Health and Indigenous Peoples, With a Focus on Children and Youth
Little Red River Reserve
Making Their Way in the Mainstream: Indigenous Entrepreneurs, Social Capital and Performance in Toronto's Marketplace
Mercantile Capital and the Livelihood of Residents of the Hudson Bay Basin: A Marxist Interpretation
[Micheal Mascarenhas: White Privilege and Neo-liberalism]
Native Studies 20: Student Resource Guide
Networks of Advantage: Urban Indigenous Entrepreneurship and the Importance of Social Capital
Analysis of data from the Aboriginal Entrepreneurship in Toronto Study. Excerpt from Well-being in the Urban Aboriginal Community: Fostering Biimaadiziwin edited by David Newhouse, Kevin FitzMaurice, Tricia McGuire-Adams, and Daniel Jetté.
Originally presented at the 2011 National Research Conference on Urban Aboriginal Peoples.
Never Until Now: Indigenous & Racialized Women's Experiences Working in Yukon & Northern British Columbia Mine Camps
Research consisted of survey and semi-structured interviews using open-ended questions with 22 respondents. Study found: limited job opportunityand longevity of employment, inadequate pay scale for hours worked, uequal work expectations, limited opportunities for advancement, inadequate harm prevention, gender or race harassement/discrimination with absence of grievance mechanisms, poor environmental practices, and limited economic benefits to Indigenous people.