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Best Practices in Sustainable Housing Delivery in Inuit Nunangat
Creating Opportunity in Inuit Nunangat: The Crisis in Inuit Education and Labour Market Outcomes
Culture in Schooling in the Inuvialuit Settlement Region
Forearm Bone Density is not elevated in Inuit Women with Impaired Fasting Glucose or Type 2 Diabetes Mellitus
Free, Prior & Informed Consent and the Future of Inuit Self-Determination
Indigenous Self-Determination in Northern Canada and Norway
Inuit: Fact sheet for Inuit Nunangat
Inuit: Fact Sheet for Inuvialuit Region
Inuit Nunangat Region Community Well-Being Scores by Census Year [1981-2016]
National Inuit Submission on the Pre-Inquiry Phase of the National Inquiry into Missing and Murdered Indigenous Women and Girls: Final Report
Nutrition North Canada Program Engagement: Written Submission
Promising Practices in Suicide Prevention across Inuit Nunangat
Promising Practices in Suicide Prevention across Inuit Nunangat: NIPSPS Research and Data Collection Project
Recommendations on Northern Sustainable Food Systems
Recovering Rights: Bowhead Whales and Inuvialuit Subsistence in the Western Canadian Arctic
Reflections on the Intercultural Politics of Food, Diet, and Nutrition Research in Canadian Inuit Communities
Royal Commission on Aboriginal Peoples: Presentation by Billy Day, Inuvialuit Communications Society
Vice-President of the organization discusses his organization's role providing information and entertainment to the Inuvialuit (Inuit) of the Western Arctic; the importance of media and communications; their newspaper and television operations; revitalizing the Inuit language and culture via media; the cultural effects of southern mass media on the Inuit; funding, equipment, and staffing concerns; and a recommendation to the Commission that Aboriginal peoples get the same resources and consideration for their broadcasters as French and English Canadians do.
Royal Commission on Aboriginal Peoples: Presentation by Mary Jane Adamson and Billy Day, Inuvialuit Communications Society
Adamson discusses the importance of Aboriginal broadcasting to not only Aboriginal but non-Aboriginal Canadians as an educational and cross-cultural understanding tool; language and educational issues; and job training in broadcasting. Billy Day comments on trapping in Inuvik; the impact of the animal rights movement on the trapping economy; land claims and conservation; relations with the RCMP; as well as education and the impact of residential schooling in the North on Aboriginal languages. Following the presentation the assembled Commissioners discuss some of the issues raised.