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Adaptation & Resilience: The Inuvialuit Story
Building on Success: Strategies for Promoting Economic Development in the North: Written Submission for the House of Commons Standing Committee on Aboriginal Affairs and Northern Development
Development and the Changing Gender Roles of Gwich'in Women
Fort Good Hope
The Impact of Aboriginal Land Claims and Self-Government on Canadian Municipalities: The Local Government Perspective
Indian Record (Vol. 36, Nos. 6-7, July-August, 1973)
Indian Record (Vol. XXVII, No. 4, April, 1964)
Inuit Voices on Arctic Security Nilliajut
The Mackenzie Gas Project: Aboriginal Interests, the Environment and Northern Canada's Energy Frontier
Modern North: People, Politics and the Rejection of Colonialism
Modern Treaties, Extraction, and Imperialism in Canada's Indigenous North: Two Case Studies
Nationalism in the North: Exploring Land Claims and Treaties with the Historical Timeline of the Northwest Territories: A Resource Guide for Teachers of Social Studies 20-1 and 20-2
Native Socio-Economic Development in Canada: Adaptation, Accessibility and Opportunity
Northern Frontier, Northern Homeland: The Report of the Mackenzie Valley Pipeline Inquiry: Volume 2 Terms and Conditions
Northern Frontier Northern Homeland: The Report of the Mackenzie Valley Pipeline Inquiry: Volume One
Northern Studies 10: Module 4: Living Together
The Role of the Public Sector in Northern Governance
Royal Commission on Aboriginal Peoples: Presentation by Chief James Firth, Inuvik Gwich'in Council
Presentation on the history of Inuvik including the relocation of people by the government from nearby Aklavik to Inuvik; alcoholism and related social and health problems; the need to prepare for future resource development; the need for cross-cultural co-operation and mutual respect; some of the goals of the Council; the relationship of self-esteem to quality of life; and the need for a "renewed political arrangement with the Government of Canada."
Royal Commission on Aboriginal Peoples: Presentation by Dick Hill
Presenter discusses the administrative, economic, and demographic composition of Inuvik, Northwest Territories. Hill discusses its' ethnic composition (1/3 First Nations, 1/3 Inuit, 1/3 other), its' administrative and institutional apparatus, and related issues in response to questioning from Commissioners Rene Dussault, Allan Blakeney, Grace Blake, and Mary Sillett. Land claims and economic development are also discussed.