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2006 [Census] Aboriginal Population Profile: Big River 118 Saskatchewan (Indian Reserve)
8th Fire: It's Time
Aboriginal and Colonial Geographies of the File Hills Farm Colony
Aboriginal Employment, Housing, Education, and the Law
Aboriginal Forestry: Community Management as Opportunity and Imperative
Agriculture: The Relationship Between Aboriginal Farmers and Non-Aboriginal Farmers
Bronchitis and Its Associated Risk Factors in First Nations Children
Budget Didn't Meet Raised Expectations
First Nations leaders contend that the federal government failed to provide funding, as promised, to poverty issues. The issues include contaminated water, black mold, and lack of funding for graduates to pursue post secondary education.
Entire issue on one pdf. To access article scroll to p.1.
A Case Study Of Kitsaki Development Corporation
Children at Muskoday (John Smith) Reserve.
City of Bridges: First Nations and Métis Economic Development in Saskatoon & Region
A Community-based Participatory Research Methodology to Address, Redress, and Reassess Disparities in Respiratory Health among First Nations
Community Participation in Identifying Needs of Developmentally Delayed or At-Risk Indian Children in Northern Saskatchewan
Correspondence and Circulars - Draft Proposal Relating to Conditions in Northern Saskatchewan
Historical note:
Harold Nelson Woodsworth served as an Indian Agent at a number of agencies in Saskatchewan.Cree Camp at Sandy Lake
Cree Family Near Building
Crooked Lake Agency - Pay Lists 1914
Historical note:
A Crop of Broken Promises
Decolonizing the Contact Hypothesis: A Critical Interpretation of Settler Youths' Experiences of Immersion in Indigenous Communities in Canada
"Dr. T. A. Patrick with two Indian women at Crescent Lake near Yorkton, n.d."
Drinking Water Management: Health Risk Perceptions and Choices in First Nations and Non-First Nations Communities in Canada
Duck Lake Agency - Ledger 1885-89, 1921-29
Historical note:
Harold Nelson Woodsworth served as an Indian Agent at a number of agencies in Saskatchewan.[Duck Lake Agency] Outgoing Correspondence Ledger
Historical note:
Harold Nelson Woodsworth served as an Indian Agent at a number of agencies in Saskatchewan.Duck Lake Indian Agency Office Records (E19)
"Everything You Want is There": The Place of the Reserve in First Nations' Homeless Mobility
Family on John Smith (Muskoday) Reserve
Federal -- Provincial Welfare Services -- Indian Eskimo Welfare
Federal -- Provincial Welfare Services -- Indian Eskimo Welfare-- Duck Lake
First Nation Onion Lake Pow Wow - Onion Lake Catholic Cemetery Sept. 2001. - Slide.
First Nation Onion Lake Pow Wow - Onion Lake Catholic Church Sept. 2001. - Slide.
Historical note:
This church burned to the ground on 22 December 1998.First Nation Successes: Developing Urban Reserves in Canada
First Nations Food, Nutrition and Environment Study: Results from Saskatchewan 2015
The Fur Trade and Western Canadian Society 1670-1870
Golden Jubilee Booklet on the History of Our Community: The Nameless Land Sometimes Called Montreal Lake
Historical note:
Complete Title: Golden Jubilee Booklet on the History of our Community The Nameless Land "Sometimes called "Montreal Lake" after the name which the school bears, but most frequently referred to as "Fournier's Station. Montreal LakeHonouring Water: The Mistawasis Nêhiyawak Water Governance Framework
Examines a collaborative water governance framework to improve Indigenous participation into water governance that reflects their own cultural beliefs.
Human Rights Complaint Filed Against MP Pankiw
Discusses the Canadian Human Rights Commission complaint filed by John Melenchuk regarding a controversial pamphlet sent out by Saskatoon Member of Parliament Jim Pankiw. At one point in the article Michael Woodiwiss contends that the essential difference between crimes committed by colonizers and contemporary Aboriginals is that the formers’ crimes went unpunished and mostly unrecorded.
Entire issue on one pdf. To access article scroll to p.8.