Understanding the Indian Act
Speakers discuss how the Act has defined the government's and Crown's relationship with First Nations peoples; how it has impeded development of communities; and how fundamental changes are needed to give First Nations' control over governance and the ability to develop mechanisms to improve access to capital.
Duration: 1:09:15.
Understanding the New BC Resource Revenue Sharing Policy With First Nations
Understanding the Role of Healing in Aboriginal Communities
Understanding Tribal Sovereignty: Definitions, Conceptualizations, and Interpretations
Discusses tribal sovereignty and relevancy for Native Americans and presents theoretical interpretations from different Native scholars.
Joint issue with: Indigenous Studies Today Issue 1, Spring 2006.
Understanding UNDRIP: Choosing Action on Priorities over Sweeping Claims about the United Nations Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples
Unearthing Indian Land: Living with the Legacies of Allotment
Uneven Ground: American Indian Sovereignty and Federal Law
Unfinished Business: Aboriginal Peoples and the 1983 Constitutional Conference
Unfinished Business: Amending the Migratory Birds Convention
Unfinished Business: NSW Government Response to the General Purpose Standing Committee 3 Report into Reparations for the Stolen Generations
Unfinished Business: The Australian Formal Reconciliation Process
Unfinished Constitutional Business? Rethinking Indigenous Self-determination
Unfinished Constitutional Business: Rethinking Indigenous Self-Determination
Unfinished Constitutional Business?: Rethinking Indigenous Self-determination
An Unfinished Nation: Completing the Devolution Revolution in Canada's North
A Unifying Vision: Shingwaukonse’s Plan for the Future of the Great Lakes Ojibwa
Union of B.C. Indian Chiefs Aboriginal Title Curriculum Project
United by the Problem, Divided by the Solution: How the Issue of Indigenous Women in Prostitution Was Represented at the Deliberations on Canada’s Bill C-36
United Church, Feds Both Liable (For Atrocities at the Port Alberni Indian Residential School)
Justice Donald Brenner (BCSC) found the United Church of Canada legally responsible for the abuse suffered by the students at the Port Alberni Indian Residential School.
Entire issue on one pdf. To access article scroll to p.1.