Missing and Murdered Indigenous Women in British Columbia, Canada
[Missing and Murdered Women]
The Missing and Murdered Women of Vancouver: Framing Inequality in Media Discourse in the Vancouver Sun (2006-2011)
Missing and Murdered Women: Reproducing Marginality in News Discourse
Missing: The Documentary
Missing Women Commission of Inquiry Hearing Commission: Final Submissions of the Vancouver Police Department and the Vancouver Police Board
Missing Women Commission of Inquiry: Reports and Publications
Missing Women Investigation Review
Missing Women Investigation Review: Summary Report
The Missing Women's Commission of Inquiry
The Montreal Mural
Murdered and Missing Women: Performing Indigenous Cultural Memory in British Columbia and Beyond
The National Inquiry on Murders and Disappearances of Indigenous Women and Girls: What Is It? How Should It Work?
Nobodies: How and Why We Failed the Missing and Murdered Women: Part 1 and 2
Nobodies: How and Why We Failed the Missing and Murdered Women: Part 3, 4 and 5
"Only the Silence Remains": Aboriginal Women as Victims in the Case of the Lower Eastside (Pickton) Murders, Investigative Flaws, and the Aftermath of Violence in Vancouver
[Organizational Traps: Groupthink, Rumor and Ego]
Out of Sight, Out of Mind: Gender, Indigenous Rights, and Energy Development in Northeast British Columbia, Canada
Pamela Masik and The Forgotten Exhibition: Controversy and Cancellation at the Museum of Anthropology
Person(s) of Interest and Missing Women: Legal Abandonment in the Downtown Eastside
Police Protection of Vulnerable and Marginalized Women: A Policy Discussion Report Prepared for the Missing Women Commission of Inquiry
Questions Need to be Answered, Says Family Member of Pickton's Last Victim
Reflects on the life and personality of Mona Wilson, a victim of serial killer Robert Pickton, and the naming of a corporation after Wilson's First Nation's name, Running Bear.
Entire issue on one pdf. To access article scroll to p.8.
Re-mediating the Spaces of Reality Television: America's Most Wanted and the case of Vancouver's Missing Women
(Re)Presenting Indigenous Women: A Critical Analysis of Two Reports on Missing and Murdered Indigenous Women and Girls in Canada
Red Women Rising: Indigenous Women Survivors in Vancouver’s Downtown Eastside
Remembering Vancouver's Disappeared Women: Settler Colonialism and the Difficulty of Inheritance
Remembering Vancouver's Disappeared Women: Settler Colonialism and the Difficulty of Inheritance; That Lonely Section of Hell: The Botched Investigation of a Serial Killer Who Almost Got Away
Representing Colonial Violence: Trafficking, Sex Work, and the Violence of Law
Request for Thematic Hearing during the 144th Period of Sessions, March 19-30, 2012
[Response to the MMIWG2S Calls for Justice and Red Women Rising Recommendations]
Purpose of the report was to review the recommendations from the two bodies, assess the extent to which the City has implemented the relevant ones, if it has been done effectively, and ensure better alignment in the future. Report begins on p. 14.
Revelatory Protest, Deliberative Exclusion, and the BC Missing Women Commission of Inquiry: Bridging the Mirco/Macro Divide
Special Supplement on Murdered and Missing Indigenous Women in British Columbia: Group Submission to the Human Rights Committee on the Occasion of the Consideration of the Sixth Periodic Report of Canada Submitted June 5th, 2015
Gives background to the issue, discusses the reports produced by the Missing Women Commission of Inquiry, Human Rights Watch, Inter-American Commission on Human Rights, and United Nations Committee on the Elimination of Discrimination against Women, and reports on the response of the federal and provincial governments.