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2009 [March] Status Report of the Auditor General of Canada to the House of Commons: Chapter 4: Treaty Land Entitlement Obligations--Indian and Northern Affairs
[Appendix A]: A Life Course Approach to the Social Determinants of Health for Aboriginal Peoples'
Canadian Indigenous Children's Books through the Lense of Truth and Reconciliation
Primary source for titles was Amazon Best Sellers in Children’s Native Canadian Story Books, as well as publishers' web pages, and library and authors' lists. Objective was to identify fiction books for ages 0-18 written by Indigenous authors that contained reconciliation-related themes. More than 150 books met the inclusion criteria.
The Central Eskimo
Changes Come to the Canadian Prairies
Focuses on the numbered treaties and their effect on First Nations and the Métis, and the causes and impacts of the North-West Resistance. Intended for Grade 10 Social Studies students.
Chapter from Horizons: Canada's Emerging Identity, 2nd Edition, by Michael Cranny.
Changing Women: Thomas King's Depiction of Indigenous Female Characters in Green Grass, Running Water
Close Encounters of the Canadian Kind: Emily Carr’s Impressions of Nuu-chah-nulth Culture
Commerce by a Frozen Sea: Native Americans and the European Fur Trade
Chapters one and two from the book. Note: Many tables are missing.
Complex Poverty and Home-Grown Solutions in Two Prairie Cities
Conclusion: Healing, Invention, Tradition
Cultural Continuity as a Moderator of Suicide Risk Among Canada's First Nations
Diabetes and the Status Aboriginal Population in Alberta
Dogrib Midnight Runners
Short story from The Moon of Letting Go and Other Stories.
Related: Author's reading of the story.
Encountering Professional Psychology: Re-Envisioning Mental Health Services for Native North America
Foreword
From Tent to Trading Post and Back Again: Smithsonian Anthropology in Nunavut, Nunavik, Nitassinan, and Nunatsiavut - The Changing IPY Agenda, 1882-2007
Good Data Practices for Indigenous Data Sovereignty and Governance
Historical Amnesia and the Discourse of the Romantic, Mythical Other
Housing for Aboriginal Children & Youth: The Need for a Holistic Approach
"Imagine Trying to Convince the World You Exist"
Indigenous Data Sovereignty
Indigenous Peoples and Black People in Canada: Settlers or Allies?
Indigenous Peoples of Canada and Their Efforts to Achieve True Reparations
The Long and Winding Road to Self-Government: The Nunavik and Nunatsiavut Experiences
The Mental Health of Aboriginal Peoples in Canada: Transformations of Identity and Community
The National Minority Languages in Sweden: Their Status in Legislation and in Practice
Native American Religious Traditions
Native Canadians in Urban Areas
The New Northern Policy Universe
Nurturing the Seeds of Indigenous Early Learning and Child Care in Canada
Perpetuating White Australia: Aboriginal Self-Representation, White Editing and Preferred Stereotypes
Preliminaries and Chapter 1
Rehearsing with Reality: Exploring Health Issues with Aboriginal Youth through Drama
Report on the Sarcee Indians
Richard Wagamese: An Ojibway in Alberta
The Road Not Taken: Aboriginal Rights after the Re-Imagining of the Canadian Constitutional Order
The Role of Traditional Healers in Comprehensive HIV/AIDS Prevention and Care in Africa: Untapped Opportunities
Sámi Legal Culture - and Its Place in Norwegian Law
Symbolic and Discursive Violence in Media Representations of Aboriginal Missing and Murdered Women
Theatre or Corroboree, What's in a Name? Framing Indigenous Australian 19th-Century Commercial Performance Practices
Toward More Effective, Evidence-Based Suicide Prevention in Nunavut
The Use of History in Aboriginal Land Claims
"We Must Farm to Enable Us to Live": The Plains Cree and Agriculture to 1900
Disproves the commonly held belief that despite government efforts and assistance, reserve populations lacked the inclination or ability to farm.
Chapter five from The Prairie West as Promised Land edited by Chris Kitzan and R.D. Francis