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Indians of Yukon and Northwest Territories - Booklet. - March 1967.
Indigenous Perspectives Education Guide
Teacher's resource includes lesson plans, classroom activities, links to online resources, and worksheets divided into five sections with associated themes: human geography (Indigenous peoples, civilizations and territories; contact to 1763 (encounters with Europeans); 1763 to 1876 (oral histories and biographies); 1876 to 1914 (policies and politics); 1914 to 1982 (separate and unequal); and 1980s to present day (toward reconciliation).
The Industrial Transformation of Subarctic Canada
Interview with Five Elders of the Sarcee Reserve
Interview with Frank and Alice Halcrow
Interview with John Yellowhorn (Hereditary Chief)
Interviews Pertaining to Chipewyan Lakes Census
Introduction: Native Peoples in British Columbia
Isadore Willier Interview
James Bull Interview 1
Jean Marie Mustus Interview
Jim Yelloweyes Interview 2
Jimmy and Charlie Chief Interview
Joe Bellerose Field Report
John Buffalo Interview
Joseph Lee Phelps Interview
Joseph R. MacAuley Sr. Interview
Lord Selkirk’s Deed from the Hudson’s Bay Company
Lost in the Woods: Navigating Aboriginal Interests in Natural Resource Development: A Discussion Paper
Manito Gitigaan Governing in the Great Spirit's Garden: Wild Rice in Treaty # 3: An Example of Indigenous Government Public Policy Making and Intergovernmental Relations Between the Boundary Waters Anishinaabeg and the Crown, 1869-1994
Manitoba and Canada's North-West: Founders and Builders
Special issue of Canadian Issues containing articles which focus on the Métis and the formation of Manitoba.
Max Ireland Interview #2
Mina’igoziibiing: A History of the Anishinaabeg of Pine Creek First Nation in Manitoba
Mrs. Alexandrine Nicolas Interview
Mrs. Buffalo Interview
Mrs. Marion Dillon Interview
Mrs. Mary Jacobson Interview
Nishnawbe-Aski Nation: Part 1
"No Basis For Argument": The Signing of Treaty Nine in Northern Ontario, 1905-1906
Northern Dene Bibliography
Notes on the Historical Source Material in the Ayer Collection on the North American Indian Presented by Edward E. Ayer to the Newberry Library, Chicago.
Historical note:
"In 1911 Edward E. Ayer, a Chicago businessman, presented to The Newberry Library his collection of historical source material relating chiefly to the discovery, exploration and colonization of North America and to the native races of North America, the Hawaiian Islands and the Philippine Islands. It contains at present about 49,000 volumes, bound pamphlets, manuscripts, documents and other accessioned pieces."The Ojibwa: 1640-1840: Two Centuries of Change from Sault Ste. Marie to Coldwater-Narrows
Old Fort Hills and Sioux Indians Crossing the Plains to Fort Carlton / Summer 1879. - Part I.
Historical note:
Old Fort Hills and Sioux Indians Crossing the Plains to Fort Carlton / Summer 1879. - Part II.
Historical note:
[Operation Water Spirit Thematic Units]: Grade Eight: Foreigners Invade Your Country Simulation
An Overview of Aboriginal History in Canada
The Panis: An Historical Outline of Canadian Indian Slavery in the Eighteenth Century
Part II: Pre-Confederation Claims and Federal and Provincial Obligations: A Survey of the Applicable Law
The Political Economy of Indian Health and Disease in the Canadian Northwest
Potential and Paradox: A Gateway to Minnesota's Past
Prior to the Negotiations
A Program of Research Related to Historical Métis Communities
Reconsidering Confederation: Canada's Founding Debates, 1864 - 1999
See:
Chapter Two: Compact, Contract, Covenant: The Evolution of First Nations Treaty-Making by J.R. Miller.
Chapter Six: Resisting Canada’s Will: Manitoba’s Entry into Confederation by Robert Wardhaugh and Barry Ferguson.
Chapter Eleven: “A More Accurate Face on Canada to the World”: The Creation of Nunavut by P. Whitney Lackenbauer and Andr&ecaute Légaré.