Disrobing the Aboriginal Industry: The Deception Behind Indigenous Cultural Preservation
Disrupting Race, Claiming Colonization: Collective Remembering and Rhetorical Colonialism in Negotiating (Native)American Identities in the U.S.
Dissenters Must Be Heard, Too: [Final Edition]
Dissolution: The Politics of Language for Native Americans
District Chiefs Dissolve All Committees
District Chiefs Reject Indian Affairs Budget
Diversifying Identity, Diversifying Strategy: Revisiting the Sami of Sweden
"Diversity is our Strength"? Memory, Trauma and Social Critique in Contemporary Canadian Literature by Indigenous Women
The Diversity of Protest Acts: The Geography of Protest in Comparative Perspective
Divided Nations: Policy, Activism and Indigenous Identity on the U.S.-Mexico Border
Divided We Fall: Cherokee Sovereignty and the Cost of Factionalism, 1827-1906
The Divided Yoeme (Yaqui) People
Dividing Alaska: Native Claims, Statehood and Wilderness Preservation
The Division of Matrimonial Real Property on American Indian Reservations
Four case studies: Navajo Nation, Hopi tribe, Luiseño Indian nations of California, and Native Village of Barrow.
Divorce and Real Property on American Indian Reservations: Lessons for First Nations and Canada
Dizzying Dialogue: Canadian Courts and the Continuing Justification of the Dispossession of Aboriginal Peoples
DNA Testing to Prove Indian Status Limited
Even with the amendments made to the Indian Act in 1985, complexities continue to surround Aboriginal people's attempts to regain their legal status.
Entire issue on one pdf. To access article scroll to p.9.
DND Gets More While INAC Gets Less
Article is critical of the Harper government's decision to increase military spending at the expense of Indian and Northern Affairs Canada (INAC).
Entire issue on one pdf. To access article scroll to p.10.
Do Canadian Power-Sharing Agreements with First Nations Peoples Hold Lessons for Taiwan?
Do Constitutional Rights Matter? The Impact of Section 35 on Aboriginal and Treaty Rights in Canada
Do Fences Make Good Neighbours?: The Influence of Territoriality in State-Sámi Relations
Do Governments Have a Duty to Consult First Nations About Proposed Legislative Amendments?
Dǫ nàke làànı̀ nàts’etso: A Critical Review of Self-Government Implementation in Canada’s North
Indigenous Studies Thesis (PhD) -- University of Manitoba, 2022.
“Do Not Take Them from Myself and My Children for Ever”: Aboriginal Water Rights in Treaty 7 Territories and the Duty to Consult
Do Some Work for Me: Settler Colonialism, Professional Communication, and Representations of Indigenous Water.
Do Tripartite Approaches to Reform of Services for First Nations Make a Difference: A Study of Three Sectors
Do Water Service Provision Contracts With Neighbouring Population Centres Reduce Drinking Water Risk on Reserves?
A Doctor Among the Oglala Sioux Tribe: The Letters of Robert H. Ruby, 1953-1954
'Doctor Do-Good'?: Charles Duguid and Aboriginal Politics, 1930s-1970s
Doctor, Lawyer, Indian Chief...: Dependency Among the Maliseet and the Impact of the Indian Act
Document 1: The Office of the Treaty Commissioner: Challenges and Changes in First Nations Law: Speaking Notes of David Arnot, Treaty Commissioner for the Province of Saskatchewan to Canadian Bar Association, Saskatchewan Branch, Native Law Section 11 April 1997
Document 3: Protocol Agreement between Canada, Saskatchewan and FSIN
Document One: Memorandum for the Hon[uorable] the Indian Commissioner Relative to the Future Management of Indians
Memorandum written July 20, 1885 by Hayter Reed, Assistant Indian Commissioner to Indian Commissioner, Edgar Dewdney outlining policies appropriate to the post-rebellion era. The document is divided in two parts: on the right is text of the memorandum and on the left comments written by Edgard Dewdney.See also Document Two: Reply to the Above Memorandum
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.
Document Two: Reply to the Above Memorandum
A Documentation and Evaluation of the Pangnirtung Tourism Program
Documenting Ethnic Cleansing in North America: Creating Unseen Tears
Documents: Introduction
Introduction and documents regarding Lake of Two Mountains Petition which speak to the social gulf, that by the mid-1870's, separated the Mohawks and Oka townspeople
Documents: Introduction
Documents of Native American Political Development: 1500s to 1933
Documents Relative to Indian Affairs: To the Great Council of the Thirteen Fires, the Speech of Corn Plant, Half Town and Big Tree, Chiefs and Counselors of the Seneca Nations
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.