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[The Art of the State III: Belonging? Diversity, Recognition, and Shared Citizenship in Canada]
Creating Interracial Intimacies: British North America, Canada, and the Transatlantic World, 1830-1914
Creek Diplomacy in an Imperial Atlantic World
“Enwau Prydeinig gwyn?” Problematizing the Idea of “White British” Names and Naming Practices from a Welsh Perspective
Figuring America
From Palace to Longhouse: Portraits of the Four Indian Kings in a Transatlantic Context
A Global Perspective on Costing Indigenous Language Revitalization
Discusses the degree of endangerment, demographic and linguistic data, gross domestic product, government revitalization expenditures, and funding for minority languages, environmental protection and Indigenous affairs in 10 countries: Australia, Brazil, Mexico, New Zealand, Norway, Scotland, Spain, Sweden, United States and Wales.
The History of Federal Indian Policies
Indexing (In)authenticity: Art and Artefact in Ethnography Museums
Jurisdictional Comparisons of Child Welfare System Design
A Narrative of Some Passages in the History of Eenoolooapik, a Young Esquimaux, Who Was Brought to Britain in 1839, in the Ship "Neptune" of Aberdeen...
Orkneymen to Rupert's Landers: Orkney Workers in the Saskatchewan District, 1795-1830
"Our Amazing Visitors": Catherine Cartwright's Account of Labrador Inuit in England
Comments on four letters containing new information regarding a group of five Inuit who travelled to England from Labrador in the 18th century. The four letters discussed are included.
Re-visualizing a History: First Nations, Children and Costuming - Exhibition
Representing Colonial Australia at British American and European International Exhibitions
Rethinking Image and Narrative at the Heart of Empire: Notes from Indigenous London
Presenter discusses how there has been a record of an Indigenous travelers to London dating as far back as 1502, which debunks the common attitude that Indigenous peoples and urbanity and modernity are mutually exclusive.
Duration: 48:36