Being Neighbourly: Urban Reserves, Treaty Settlement Lands, and the Discursive Construction of Municipal–First Nation Relations
The Benefits of Being Indian: Blood Quanta, Intermarriage, and Allotment Policy on the White Earth Reservation, 1889–1920
Benefits, Services, and Resources for Aboriginal Peoples
Canada, British Columbia, and the Development of Indian Reserve No. 2, at Chuchuwayha
Canupawakpa Dakota First Nation Inquiry Turtle Mountain Surrender Claim
Canupawakpa Dakota First Nation Turtle Mountain Surrender Claim - Public Edition, July 2008
FILES CAN ONLY BE ACCESSED USING FIREFOX BROWSER. Contains historical documents, memos, reports, correspondence/letters, maps and submissions regarding validity of the 1909 surrender claim. Commissioners include: Roger J. Austine, Daniel J. Bellegarde, and Sheila G. Purdy. [These files were created and compiled by the ICC and provided to the Indigenous Studies Portal in 2009 to make widely available in online format.]
Caregivers’ Perspectives on the Determinants of Dietary Decisions in Six First Nation Communities
Cashing in on Indian Casinos: The Impacts of "Off-Reservation" Casinos on Sovereignty, the Gaming Industry, Surrounding Communities, Reservations, and Tribal Identities
A City's Experience With Urban Aboriginal Issues
Commons, Enclosure, and Resistance in Kahnawá:ke Mohawk Territory, 1850–1900
Community Healing and Aboriginal Self-Government
Conducting Homeless Counts On Native American Lands: A Toolkit
Developing Federal Policy For First Nations People in Urban Areas: 1945-1975
Don McLean Interview
Enabling Indigenous Urban Design: An Examination of Theory and Precedents for Application in Winnipeg
Enquête sur la Revendication de la Première Nation Dakota de Canupawakpa Relative à la Cession des Collines Turtle
Failures by Design: The On-Reserve First Nations’ Housing Crisis and its Roots in Canadian Evaluation Frameworks
The First and the Forced: Essays on the Native American and African American Experience
Genocide, Assimilation, or Incorporation: Indigenous Identity and Modes of Resistance
Grade 5: Teliaqewey, Kaqowey net Teliaqeweyminu? = Ah, the Truth. What Is Our Truth? = Wolamewakon. Keq Nit Kwolamewakonon?
Content focused on the Mi'kmaq, Wolastoqewiyik, and Passamaquoddy (Peskotomuhkati) peoples of New Brunswick.
Related materials: Interactive Activities; Activity Answer Sheet Lesson A: Worldview in Muin/Bear/Muwin and The Seven Hunters
Group Rights of First Nations Need Protection, too
Improving on Nature: The Legend Lake Development, Menominee Resistance, and the Ecological Dynamics of Settler Colonialism
It Happened as if Overnight: The Expropriation and Relocation of Stoney Point Reserve # 43, 1942
Marie Osecap 2 Interview
Montana Indians: Their History and Location
On the "Indianness" of Bingo: Gambling and the Native American Community
The Plains Cree: The Little Pine First Nation, A Heuristic Inquiry
Private Reservations: Liberal Forms and Indigenous Norms in the Theory and Practice of Property
Report of a Trip Made in Behalf of the Indian Rights Association to Some Indian Reservations of the Southwest
Reserve 107: Reconciliation on the Prairies
[Resurgence of Traditional Ways of Being: Indigenous Paths of Action and Freedom]
A Road Runs Through It: Aboriginal Citizenship at the Edge of Urban
Royal Commission on Aboriginal Peoples: Presentation by Eric Robinson, President, Aboriginal Council of Winnipeg
Royal Commission on Aboriginal Peoples: Presentation by Jack Smith
Royal Commission on Aboriginal Peoples: Presentation by Jennifer Wood and Mary Guilbeault, Winnipeg First Nations Tribal Council
Royal Commission on Aboriginal Peoples: Presentation by Keith Chiefmoon
Royal Commission on Aboriginal Peoples: Presentation by Marguerite Cardin, Elder and Pierre Taillon, Directeur, Alliance autochtone, Local st-Jerome
Settler City Limits: Indigenous Resrugence and Colonial Violence in the Urban Prairie West
Six Miles Deep
Six Miles Deep: Study Guide
Solomo Peyopiskos Interview
Telling Our Twisted Histories
Website contains links to a series of 12 podcasts which explore the impact of words such as reconciliation, indian time, school, reserve, and savage. Host Kaniehti:io Horn engages in conversations with more than 70 people from 15 First Nations, Inuit and Métis communities.