Aboriginal Domestic Violence in Canada
Aboriginal Gangs Don't Come Out of Nowhere
Aboriginal Organized Crime in Canada: Developing a Typology for Understanding and Strategizing Responses
Aboriginal Prison Releases in New South Wales –
Preliminary Comments Based on Ex-Prisoner Research
Aboriginal Youth Rebellion in Canada
Addressing Domestic Violence in Indian Country: Introductory Manual
Afterward: A Response Essay
Arctic Justice: On Trial for Murder, Pond Inlet, 1923
Arrest Made in Decades-Old Native Slaying
The "Baby Andy" Report: Examination of Services Provided to Baby Andy and His Family
Barriers to Implementing Holistic, Community-Based Treatment for Offenders with Fetal Alcohol Conditions
Beyond Invisibility: A REDress Collaboration to Raise Awareness of the Crisis of Missing and Murdered Aboriginal Women
Book Reviews
Broken Trust: Indigenous People and the Thunder Bay Police Service
Canada, The Perpetrator: The Legacy of Systemic Violence and the Contemporary Crisis of Missing and Murdered Indigenous Women and Girls
Challenges and Resiliency in Aboriginal Adults with Fetal Alcohol Spectrum Disorder
Child Abuse and Neglect in Indigenous Australian Communities
Child Abuse Protocol Development Guide
A Clear and Present Danger: Pathways Toward Ending Aboriginal Family Violence and Abuse
Colonialism and Criminal Justice for Indigenous Peoples in Australia, Canada, New Zealand and the United States of America
Community Crisis Planning for Prevention, Response, and Recovery: First Nations Service Delivery Model
Community Responses to Violence in Holman, Northwest Territory
Con(TEXT) 1: A Project Fact (A) Update for 26 April 2018
Plain language explanation of legal principles involved in analysis of R. v. Stanley, the case in which Gerald Stanley, a Saskatchewan farmer, was charged with second-degree murder in the shooting death of a 22-year-old Cree man, Colton Boushie, and was subsequently acquitted.
Confronting Canada’s Indigenous Female Disposability
“Creating a Framework for the Wisdom of the Community”: Review of Victim Services in Nunavut, Northwest and Yukon Territories
Crime Prevention and Indigenous Communities: Current International Strategies and Programs: Final Report
Cultural Genocide in Canada? It Did Happen Here
Culture, Healing and Spirituality and Their Influence on Treatment Programs for Aboriginal Offenders
The Direct and Indirect Impacts of Organized Crime on Youth, as Offenders and Victims
Discriminatory and Unfair Practices against the Indigenous Peoples of Canada in the Selection of Criminal Juries
Domestic Violence Risk Assessment, Risk Management and Safety Planning with Indigenous Populations
Educational Status and its Association With Risk and Protective Factors for First Nations Youth
Examining HIV/AIDS Among the Aboriginal Population in Canada in the Post-Residential School Era
The Familiar Face of Genocide: Internalized Oppression Among American Indians
Final Written Submission: National Inquiry on Missing and Murdered Indigenous Women and Girls
First Nations and the Canadian Legal System: Conflict Management or Dispute Resolution?
First Nations, Métis, Inuit and Non-Aboriginal Federal Offenders: A Comparative Profile
[From Davis Inlet to Natuashish: New Homes, Same Old Problems]
Genocide and Colonialism, II
[Genocide, Language and Aboriginal People]: Multiple Identities in History
Talk given at Presence of the Past: The Third National Conference on Teaching, Learning and Communicating the History of Canada, October 2003. Duration: 34:18.
Gothic Silence: S. Alice Callahan's Wynema, the Battle of the Little Bighorn, and the Indigenous Unspeakable
Government of British Columbia Submission to the
National Inquiry into Missing and Murdered Indigenous Women and Girls
Healing the Impact of Colonization, Genocide, Missionization, and Racism on Indigenous Populations
Healing Words
The Highway Runs East: Poverty, Policing, and the Missing and Murdered Indigenous Women of Nova Scotia
Historians and Indigenous Genocide in Saskatchewan
Hostile Nations: Quantifying the Destruction of the Sullivan-Clinton Genocide of 1779
Human Rights Complaint Filed Against MP Pankiw
Discusses the Canadian Human Rights Commission complaint filed by John Melenchuk regarding a controversial pamphlet sent out by Saskatoon Member of Parliament Jim Pankiw. At one point in the article Michael Woodiwiss contends that the essential difference between crimes committed by colonizers and contemporary Aboriginals is that the formers’ crimes went unpunished and mostly unrecorded.
Entire issue on one pdf. To access article scroll to p.8.