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The Flemish Bastard and the Former Indians: Métis and Identity in Seventeenth-Century New York
A Guide to the Louis Riel Papers
Discusses documents found in the Provincial Archives of Manitoba, Archives de l'Archevêché de Saint-Boniface, Public Archives of Canada, Archives de la Chancellerie de l’Archevêché de Montréal, and Les Archives du Séminaire de Québec and the periods in Riel's life which are not represented in any collections. Two appendices list documents and the repositories in which they are found. Research was conducted as part of the Riel Project and published as The Collected Papers of Louis Riel.
Importance of Métis Ways of Knowing in Healing Communities
"In From the Margins": Government of Saskatchewan Policies to Support Métis Learning, 1969-1979
Indian and Inuit Family Law and the Canadian Legal System
Indigeneity in Dialogue: Indigenous Literary Expression Across Linguistic Divides
Intergenerational Ethnic Mobility Among Canadian Aboriginal Populations in 2001
Job Satisfaction and Aboriginal Labour Mobility Among Non-Reserve Populations: An Overlooked Variable?
The Marriage of Mother and Father: Michif Influences as Expressions of Métis Intellectual Sovereignty in Stories of the Road Allowance
Oral Health Interventions Among Indigenous Populations in Canada
Policy Writing as Dialogue: Drafting an Aboriginal Chapter for Canada's Tri-Council Policy Statement: Ethical Conduct for Research Involving Humans
Reading Beyond Race in Margaret Laurence's "The Loons" From A Bird in the House
Reconsidering Riel: A Necessary Exercise
Red River's Anglophone Community: The Conflicting Views of John Christian Schultz and Alexander Begg
Discusses how the two men's writings illustrate the two views points about the best option for Red River settlement's future: those who were in favour of annexation by Canada and those who felt that it would not be in the settlement's best interests since terms and conditions of it's future would be dictated by eastern Canadians.