Developing and Expanding Aboriginal Mental Health Services
Developing Sustainability: A Native / Environmentalist Prescription for Third-Level Government
Development, Decay, Re-Development: The Politics of the Northwest Territories
Development of a Formula for Funding Special Education in Reserve Schools in Saskatchewan
Development Planning in the Eastern Arctic: The Role of Communities in a Comprehensive Development Strategy Volume I
Development Planning in the Northwest Territories: The Case of Tourism
The Dharawal and Gandangara in Colonial Campbelltown, New South Wales, 1788-1830
Diabetes
Diabetes and Behavior: American Indian Issues
Diabetes, the Ice Free Corridor, and the Paleoindian Settlement of North America
Dialogue Journals: A Technique to Strengthen Ethnic Pride and Achievement
Disabled American Indians: A Special Population Requiring Special Considerations
Discipline and Our Children
Discipling the Innut: Social Form and Control in Bush, Community and School
Dispossession or Adaptation? Migration and Persistence of the Red River Métis, 1835‑1890
Document One: The Fulton Report
Edited version of a discussion paper prepared by E. Davie Fulton to assist in the resolution of the Lubicon Lake Band's struggle for tradition lands. The Lubicon Cree were missing from the original signing and negotiations of Treaty 8. Introduction by Peter Kulchyski.
Documents: Introduction
Introduction and two archival items on social and economic conditions of Aboriginal people. The first report is on the socio-economic conditions that contributed to the spread of tuberculosis, and the economic measures needed to be taken to improve the lives of the Swampy Cree Indians. The second report is an account of the socio-economic conditions of Aboriginal people and recommendations for improving their health status.
Documents [Introduction to Documents and Commentaries]
Focuses on the Treaty Alliance of North American Aboriginal Nations which is a mutual defense pact. Includes supportive commentaries.
Documents Two and Three: Dene/Metis Agreement in Principle with the Federal Government and Introduction
Introduction and two documents related to the signing of the Agreement-In-Principal between the Déne and Métis of the North West Territories and Government of Canada resolving a land claim of the Native people.
Double Masks of the Northwest Coast of America in Museum Collections
Dr. Alice Kehoe at Francois-Finlay Post Excavation
Historical note:
The Francois-Finlay Post was the first "pedlar" post on the Saskatchewan River was a combined effort of François Le Blanc, a veteran of the La Vérendrye family's 1740's expeditions, and James Finlay, a Scottish-born businessman. Located just about 150 kilometres east of Prince Albert, below Finlay's Falls near present-day Nipawin, Saskatchewan, the stockaded post was the focus of 20th century archeological excavations.