1986 Annual Report - Gabriel Dumont Institute of Native Studies and Applied Research. - 1986.
Historical note:
Historical note:
Of the 550 persons participating in count, 90.1% were Indigenous.
Related Material: Infographic.
Discusses the barriers and lack of community engagement in a job program designed to improve employment for underrepresented groups in British Columbia.
Compilation of primary sources, mainly newspaper articles.
Investigation was undertaken due to ongoing complaints about the escalating violence, prostitution and sale of drugs in the inner city neighbourhood.
Related Material: Part 2: What We Heard Report; Part 3: Data Summary; Executive Summary.
Results organized under six headings: demographics, language and culture, education and training, skills and work readiness, labour market indicators, and workplace wellbeing and culture.
Uses a weighted sample of 2,211 First Nations children and 34,575 non-Indigenous children extracted from administrative databases of institutions which provided child protection services.
Results from 1,350 individuals living in 25 communities. Respondents were asked questions about employment, income, ability to meet expenses, retirement, cultural practices, First Nations language skills, and physical health.
Addresses the issue of individuals at the university benefiting from fraudulent claims of Indigenous identity.
Using surveys to examine the housing conditions for Saskatchewan Indigenous communities.
Examines the effectiveness of Indigenous youth who once experience homelessness serving as peer mentors to other homeless Indigenous youth.