Exploring Indigenous Approaches to Evaluation and Research in the Context of Victim Services and Supports
Pacific Historical Review, Vol. 71, No. 1, February 2002, pp. 153-155
Pacific Historical Review, Vol. 71, No. 1, February 2002, pp. 153-155
Examines the importance of Métis Aunties and how Métis women's participation in research helps to better understand this role.
Designed for Grade 4.
Indigenous Studies Thesis (PhD) -- Australian National University, 2020.
Examines the link between having parents who attended Residential Schools and the likelihood of Indigenous children ending up in foster care during the Sixties Scoop.
Reprint of a contracted report including recommendations, based on 1997-1998 interviews in the Springhill Institution, Prison for Women, the Regional Psychiatric Centre (Prairies) and the Saskatchewan Penitentiary. Report notes significant drop in percentage of Aboriginal women incarcerated during period of report writing.
Related Material: Part 2: What We Heard Report; Part 3: Data Summary; Executive Summary.
Compares the cost of complying with the Canadian Human Rights Tribunal decision to settling a class action suit.
Results organized under six headings: demographics, language and culture, education and training, skills and work readiness, labour market indicators, and workplace wellbeing and culture.
Looks at the challenges for Indigenous students entering post-secondary education.
Uses a weighted sample of 2,211 First Nations children and 34,575 non-Indigenous children extracted from administrative databases of institutions which provided child protection services.
Suitable for primary grades.