(Re)Making Indigenous Water Worlds: Settler Colonialism, Indigenous Rights, and Hydrosocial Relations in the Settler Nation State
RE: Standing Committee Hearings on Bill C-6, "The Specific Claims Resolution Act".
A Recipe for Change: Reclamation of Indigenous Food Sovereignty in O-Pipon-Na-Piwin Cree Nation
Recognition and Reconciliation: An Alberta Fact or Fiction?
Recognition of Inherent Rights Through Legislative Initiatives
Recognizing Rights: Aboriginal Justice in Canada
Reconsidering Confederation: Canada's Founding Debates, 1864 - 1999
See:
Chapter Two: Compact, Contract, Covenant: The Evolution of First Nations Treaty-Making by J.R. Miller.
Chapter Six: Resisting Canada’s Will: Manitoba’s Entry into Confederation by Robert Wardhaugh and Barry Ferguson.
Chapter Eleven: “A More Accurate Face on Canada to the World”: The Creation of Nunavut by P. Whitney Lackenbauer and Andr&ecaute Légaré.
Referendum in B.C. Doesn't Mean Much
Renewable Resources of the Beaufort Sea for our Children: Perspectives from an Inuvialuit Elder
Report Concerning Relations Between Local Governments and First Nation Governments
Report of an Inquiry into an Injustice: Begade Shutagot'ine and the Sahtu Treaty
Report Submitted by the NGO Aboriginal Legal Services of Toronto to the United Nations Committee on the Elimination of Racial Discrimination (CERD)
Research Principles for Working with First Nations
Resurging through Kishiichiwan: The Spatial Politics of Indigenous Water Relations
A Review of the Social Union Framework Agreement and Its Implications on the Métis Nation: A Report Prepared for the Métis National Council
A Roadmap to the Truth and Reconciliation Commission Call to Action #66
Saskatchewan Treaty and Aboriginal Rights for Hunting and Fishing Guide
Seals, Selfies, and the Settler State: Indigenous Motherhood and Gendered Violence in Canada
Section 91(24) and Canada's Legislative Jurisdiction with Respect to the Métis
Sections 7 and 15 of the Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms in the Context of the Clean Water Crisis on Reserves: Opportunities and Challenges for First Nations Women
The Self Government Landscape
Shape Shifting: Making Space for Indigenous Process within the Politics of Canada
Shifting Boundaries: Aboriginal Identity, Pluralist Theory, and the Politics of Self-Government in Canada
Shooting the Messenger: Historical Impediments to the Mediation of Modern Aboriginality in Ontario
A Sign of Forgotten Times?: Alberta Places Little Value on Time Before Settlers
Examines the lack of legal protection for traditional burial sites within the city of Edmonton.
Entire issue on one pdf. To access article scroll to p.5.
Sit Down and Drink Your Beer: Regulating Vancouver's Beer Parlours, 1925-1954
Sovereign Intentions: Gold Law and Mineral Staking in British Columbia
Speaking Truth to Power III: Self-Government: Options and Opportunities, March 14 - 15, 2002
The Spirit of Annie Mae
Stifling Native Organizations Could Backfire
Stolen Generation Narratives in Local and Global Contexts
Stories of Oka: Land, Film, and Literature
Sui Generis and Treaty Citizenship
"Surely Uncontroversial": The Problems and Politics of Environmental Conservation as a Justification for the Infringement of Aboriginal Rights in Canada
Survival, Resistance, and the Canadian State: The Transformation of New Brunswick’s Native Economy, 1867-1930
Sustainable Food Security in the Arctic: State of Knowledge
Taking the “Aboriginal Perspective” Seriously The (Mis)use of Indigenous Law in Tsilhqot’in Nation v British Columbia
Taxation and Representation: Non-Native Leaseholders on Indian Reserves
Theorizing Citizenship in British Settler Societies
There's Frustration in Indian Country
Throne Speech Nothing But Rhetoric
Thunder on the Tundra: Inuit Qaujimajatuqangit of the Bathurst Caribou
Toward a Shared Future: Canada's Indigenous Peoples and the Oil and Gas Industry
Toward a Successful Shared Future for Canada: Research Insights from the Knowledge Systems, Experiences and Aspirations of First Nations, Inuit and Métis Peoples
Transforming Graduate Studies through Decolonization: Sharing the Learning Journey of a Specialized Cohort
Treaty Federalism in Northern Canada: Aboriginal-Government Land Claims Boards
Treaty Referendum Questions Called 'Ridiculous'
Questions a referendum proposed by B. C. treaty negotiators, arguing that the rights of a minority (First Nations) were being placed in front of a majority (constituents) and that some questions asked address rights already affirmed in Canadian courts and the Constitution.
Entire issue on one pdf. To access article scroll to p.11.