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Gas Tax Rebate
Gender, Race, and Policy: Aboriginal Women and the State in Canada and Australia
The Genesis and Anatomy of Government Policy and Indian Reserve Agriculture on Four Agencies in Treaty Four, 1874-1897
Genocide, Assimilation, or Incorporation: Indigenous Identity and Modes of Resistance
George G. Mann Family in Onion Lake
George Gwynne Mann Junior (1877-1938)
George Mann Jr. in Card Game
George Mann Jr. in Saddle Lake
George Pritchard Interview #2
Getting Good Crops: Economic and Diplomatic Survival Strategies of the Montana Bitterroot Salish Indians, 1870-1891
Gladstone, Hon. James
Glass Half Empty? Year 1 Progress toward Resolving Drinking Water Advisories in Nine First Nations in Ontario
Governance within the Navajo Nation: Have Democratic Traditions Taken Hold?
Governing Lands and Waters: Limits to Reserve Title and Indian Act Powers in British Columbia, and Proposals for Reform
Governing Municipalities in a Dual Context: An Examination of Urban Indian Reserve Creation under Article 9 of the Saskatchewan Treaty Land Entitlement Framework Agreement
Government of Canada and the Education of the Canadian Indian: The Nova Scotia Micmac Experience, 1867 to 1972
Government Policy and the Economic Under-development of First Nations Communities in Manitoba
Government Termination Policy and Canadian Indians: A Fourth Policy Reality
Grade 5: Teliaqewey, Kaqowey net Teliaqeweyminu? = Ah, the Truth. What Is Our Truth? = Wolamewakon. Keq Nit Kwolamewakonon?
Content focused on the Mi'kmaq, Wolastoqewiyik, and Passamaquoddy (Peskotomuhkati) peoples of New Brunswick.
Related materials: Interactive Activities; Activity Answer Sheet Lesson A: Worldview in Muin/Bear/Muwin and The Seven Hunters
Grassy Narrows Reserve: Mercury Pollution, Social Disruption, and Natural Resources: A Question of Autonomy
Group Rights of First Nations Need Protection, too
Guest Editorial: The Question of Making Native Space
Guest Editors' Introduction
A Guide to Effective Leadership for the Reservation Administrator
Guidelines for the Development of First Nations Housing Proposals
Gwendoline B. Beck Interview
Harper Government Unilateral Federal Legislation Imposing Over First Nations
Hayter Reed, Severalty, and the Subdivision of Indian Reserves on the Canadian Prairies
Health Innovation & Equity: Recommendations From Native American Youth
Helen E. & Joe Wheaton Interview
Helga M. Reydon Interview
Hidden in Plain Sight: The US Government’s Use of the Choctaw Nation as an Environmental Toxics Dumping Ground
"A Higher Degree of Social Organization": Jan Eisenhardt and Canadian Aboriginal Sport Policy in the 1950's
Historical Development of the Tax Regimes of Maori Authorities in Aotearoa New Zealand and First Nations in Canada
A History of Alcohol as Symbol and Substance in Anishinaabe Culture, 1765-1920
History of Canadian Indians: 1867-1912
Overview of the history of First Nations, dealt with by area: North-West, South Saskatchewan, Eastern Canada, British Columbia and Yukon. The author also has sections to discuss Sioux and Eskimo (Inuit)) issues. Excerpt from: Canada and Its Provinces, Vol. VII, edited by Adam Shortt and Arthur G. Doughty.
The History of Federal Indian Policies
History of Indian Policy
History of the Indians in British North America, Showing Their Condition and Management, Being A Report to the Hon. The Secretary of State, By Freeman N. Blake, United States Consul at Hamilton
Honouring Jordan's Principle: Obstacles to Accessing Equitable Health and Social Services for First Nations Children with Special Healthcare Needs Living in Pinaymootang, Manitoba
Honouring the Children: Shadow Report Canada 3rd and 4th Periodic Report to the United Nations Committee on the Rights of the Child, October 24, 2011
Housing Natives in Northern Regions: A Comparative Analysis of Approaches in Canada, the United States, and the USSR
How Does the New TANF Work Requirement "Work" in Rural Minority Communities? A Case Study of the Northern Cheyenne Nation
Human Rights and the Native Peoples of Canada - K. Lysyk. - Reprint. - 1968.
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.