Aboriginal Women in Canada: Strategic Research Directions for Policy Development
The Ascendance of Neo-Conservatism and its Impact on Aboriginal Single Mothers of Southwestern Ontario
Assessing the Correctional Service of Canada High Intensity Family Violence Program
AWCS Host Conference to Create an Awareness
Author discusses the first World Conference of Women's Shelters arguing that governments need to understand that social problems have an economic and historical social basis.
Entire issue on one pdf. To access article scroll to p.11.
Beginning a Long Journey: A Review of Projects Funded by the Family Violence Prevention Division, Health Canada, Regarding Violence in Aboriginal Families
Between Colliding Worlds: The Inherent Ambiguity of Special Policy Agencies for Aboriginal and Women's Issues in Canada and Australia
Between the Right to Forget and the Duty to Remember: The Politics of Memory in Canada's Public Church Apologies
Beyond Blood: Rethinking Indigenous Identity by Pamela Palmater
Book Reviews
Concluding Observations of the Committee on the Elimination of Discrimination against Women: Canada
Correctional Service of Canada Ideology and "Violent" Aboriginal Female Offenders
Cultural Competency - Working With Aboriginal Peoples: A Non-Native Perspective
Dangerous Order: Globalization, Canadian Cities, and Street-Involved Sex Work
A Death in the Family: The Strategic Importance of Women in Contemporary Northern Ojibwa Society
"The Disappearance of Aboriginal Women in Canada"
"Diversity is our Strength"? Memory, Trauma and Social Critique in Contemporary Canadian Literature by Indigenous Women
Double Discrimination and Equality Rights of Indigenous Women in Quebec
Driven Apart: the Construction of Women as Worker-Citizens and Mother-Citizens in Canadian Employment and Child Care Policies, 1940-1988
Editors' Introduction: The State of the Aboriginal Economy [Volume 6, Number 2]
The Education of an Indigenous Woman: The Pursuit of Truth, Social Justice and Healthy Relationships in a Coast Salish Community Context
Enough is Enough: Aboriginal Women Speak Out
Entrepreneurship: A Journey of Economic Self-Determination
The Facts Respecting Indian Administration in the North-West
Fair Enough? How Notions of Race, Gender, and Soldiers' Rights Affected Dependents' Allowance Policies towards Canadian Aboriginal Families During World War II
The Fatality of Bias
[Feasibility Study on a Kin Home For First Nations, Inuit, and Métis Young Women Age 14 - 18]
First Nations Women and Information and Communication Technologies
First Nations Women and Sustainability on the Canadian Prairies
First Nations Women, Governance and the Indian Act:A Collection of Policy Research Reports
First Nations Women's Evacuation During Pregnancy From Rural and Remote Reserves
Gender Analysis of the New Federal Framework for Aboriginal Development: Discussion Guide and Annexes
Gender Equality Analysis Policy
Gender, Race, and Policy: Aboriginal Women and the State in Canada and Australia
The Harper Record 2008-2015
Health Professionals Working With First Nations, Inuit, and Métis Consensus Guideline
Historical Efforts to Encourage White-Indian Intermarriage in the United States and Canada
A Holistic Framework for Aboriginal Policy Research
Homelessness & Health in Canada
The Indian Missionary Record (Vol. XVIII, No. 3, March, 1955)
Indian Record (vol. 34, #5-6, May-June, 1971)
Indian Record (Vol. 36, Nos. 6-7, July-August, 1973)
Indian Registration: Unrecognized and Unstated Paternity
Indian Status, Band Membership, First Nation Citizenship, Kinship, Gender, and Race: Reconsidering the Role of Federal Law
Discusses how legislation such as the Indian Act, with its arbitrary rules about who is considered to be an "Indian", has impacted relationships and identity in Aboriginal communities. Chapter seven from Moving Forward, Making a Difference, vol. 3, which is also vol. 5 in the Aboriginal Policy Research series. Originally presented at the second annual Aboriginal Policy Research Conference, 2006.
[Indigenous Women and Work: From Labor to Activism]
Introduction: Editor's Introduction Aboriginal Policy Studies
"It Takes a Community": Constructing Aboriginal Mothers and Children with FAS/FAE as Objects of Moral Panic in/through a FAS/FAE Prevention Policy
[Kahente Horn-Miller: Indigenous Missing and Murdered Women and Girls]
The Legacy of Canadian Colonialism: The Case of Violence Against Aboriginal Women
Liberal Frontrunners Court Native Delegates Edmonton
Brief profile of two Liberal frontrunners' views on issues pertaining to Aboriginal people.
Entire issue on one pdf. To access article scroll to p.10.