Chalifoux Educates Fellow Senators with Horror Stories
Senator and Metis leader, Thelma Chalifoux, believes that political lobby groups, like the Assembly of First Nations, should not take over social programs provided for First Nations because, as she argues, politics and patronage distort the system and erode the quality of the service.
Entire issue on one pdf. To access article scroll to p.10.
The Challenges and Limitations of Assimilation: Indian Boarding Schools
Challenging the Deficit Paradigm: Grounds For Optimism Among First Nations in Canada
Chanco
Change in Nutrition and Food Security in Two Inuit Communities, 1992 to 1997
Changing Capabilities of Northern Communities: Environmental Protection
The Changing Presentation of the American Indian: Museums and Native Cultures / Privileging the Past: Historicism in the Art of the Northwest Coast
Chapter 4: Mental Health Care for American Indians and Alaska Natives
A Chapter Closed?
Characters Victorious, but Book Far from Uplifting
Book review of: Born with a Tooth Stories by Joseph Boyden.
Entire issue on one pdf. To access article scroll to p.18.
Chief Big Bear of the Plains Cree
Chief Joseph
Chief Poundmaker
Chief Poundmaker
Chief Red Pheasant Aiding Escape of Indian Officials
Chiefs Establish Wildlife Commission
Chiefs Favor "Tinkering" with Act: Dorey
Chief and president Dwight Dorey of the Congress of Aboriginal Peoples (CAP) advocates First Nations return to traditional tribal governing entities.
Entire issue on one pdf. To access article scroll to p.1.
Chiefs with Lt. Gov. Dewdney
Child Abuse and Neglect Among American Indian/Alaska Native Children: An Analysis of Existing Data
Child Maltreatment in Native American and Alaska Native Communities: A Bibliography
Child Sexual Abuse in Indian Country: Is the Guardian Keeping in Mind the Seventh Generation?
Child-Targeted Assimilation: An Oral History of Indian Day School Education in Kahnawà:ke
Children and Youth in Care: An Epidemiological Review of Mortality, British Columbia, April 1974 to March 2000: A Technical Report of the Office of the Provincial Health Officer
Children Living in Households with Members of the Stolen Generations
Children’s Perception of Wolverine in the North Slave Region of the Northwest Territories, Canada
Chronology and Timeline for American Indian History
Circulating Regalia and Lakhˇóta Survivance, c. 1900
Looks at the history of two examples of regalia that traveled to France; one with a performer in Buffalo Bill's Wild West show in 1889 and the other worn by a performer at the Jardin d'Acclimation (a human zoo) in Paris in 1911.
Circumpolar Indigeneity in Canada, Russia, and the United States (Alaska): Do Differences Result in Representational Challenges for the Arctic Council?
[Cis Dideen Kat, When the Plumes Rise: The Way of the Lake Babine Nation]
[Citizenship, Diversity and Pluralism: Canadian and Comparative Perspectives]
[City of Thunder Bay 2019 Report Responding to the Seven Youth Inquest]
City Treaty
Civilized, Roughly: Gender, Race, and the politics of Leisure in Colonial British Columbia, 1860-1871
Civilizing Kwakiutl: Contexts and Contests of Kwakiutl Personhood, 1880-1999
Claims to Native Identity in Children’s Literature
Climate Change: Papers from the Conference
Closing the Circle: Discussing Indigenous Homelessness in Canada: What We Heard at the National Indigenous Gathering in Winnipeg
Closing the Gap: Ethics and the Law in the Exhibition of Contemporary Native Art
Closing the Gap Report 2019
Co-Management: An Aboriginal Response to Frontier Development
[Co-operative Management of Local Fisheries: New Directions for Improved Management and Community Development]
Code of Conduct: For Directors, Staff and Others Involved in the Work of the Foundation
Cody Old West Antiques + Collectibles June 21 + 22 + 23, 2001 - Poster.
Historical note:
Buffalo Bill Cody helped found Cody, Wyoming in 1895, and established his TE Ranch in the area.Cody Wild West Days, May 11th-13th. 2001 - Poster.
Historical note:
Buffalo Bill Cody helped found Cody, Wyoming in 1895, and established his TE Ranch in the area. In 1902, he built the Irma Hotel, which he called "just the sweetest hotel that ever was." Buffalo Bill maintained two suites and an office at the hotel for his personal use.