Search
Beluga Co-Management: Perspectives From Kuujjuarapik and Umiujaq, Nunavik
Canada's Relationship with Inuit from Contact to the Present: A Policy Overview
Canada's Strategy: Our North, Our Heritage, Our Future
Canadian Inuit in a Mixed Economy: Thoughts on Seals, Snowmobiles, and Animal Rights
Canadian Resource Co-Management Boards and Their Relationship to Indigenous Knowledge: Two Case Studies
Co-Management Under the Inuvialuit Final Agreement: Bridging the Gap Between Indigenous Self-Regulation and State-Based Resource in the Western Arctic?
Conversations With Ole K. Sara, Retired Head of the Reindeer Administration in Norway
Creating a Market for Inuit Art: 1949-1967
Development of a Coastal Community Climate Change Action Plan for Arviat, Nunavut
Development Planning in the Eastern Arctic: The Role of Communities in a Comprehensive Development Strategy Volume I
Documents Two and Three: Dene/Metis Agreement in Principle with the Federal Government and Introduction
Introduction and two documents related to the signing of the Agreement-In-Principal between the Déne and Métis of the North West Territories and Government of Canada resolving a land claim of the Native people.
Equatorial North: Centering the Arctic in Global and Local Security
From Talking Chiefs to a Native Corporate Élite: The Birth of Class and Nationalism among Canadian Inuit
Grade 12 Current Topics in First Nations, Métis and Inuit Studies: A Foundation for Implementation
Inuit Investment Strategies in Northern Development: The Case of the Makivik Corporation in Northern Quebec
Inuit Specific Discussion on the Environment: Government of Canada Background Paper Roundtable
The Making of Eskimo Policy in Canada, 1952-62: The Life and Time of the Eskimo Affairs Committee
Northern Communities: The Prospects for Empowerment
The Nunavut Settlement: A Critical Appraisal
The Politics of Arctic Sovereignty: Oil, Ice and Inuit Governance
Politics of Knowledge and Scale: Indigenous Knowledge, Political Change and Local Participation in Resource Management in the Northwest Territories, Canada
Qikiqtani Truth Commission: Thematic Reports and Special Studies 1950-1975
"The Queen Wishes Her Red Children to Learn the Cunning of the White Man": The Myth of Educating Inuit Out of Primitive Childhood and Into Economic Adulthood
Reducing Vulnerability to Climate Change in the Arctic: The Case of Nunavut, Canada
Reindeer for the North: A Preliminary Study of the Role of the Canadian Government 1907-1960
Royal Commission on Aboriginal Peoples: Opening Remarks by Justice Sinclair
Royal Commission on Aboriginal Peoples: Presentation by Chief James Firth, Inuvik Gwich'in Council
Presentation on the history of Inuvik including the relocation of people by the government from nearby Aklavik to Inuvik; alcoholism and related social and health problems; the need to prepare for future resource development; the need for cross-cultural co-operation and mutual respect; some of the goals of the Council; the relationship of self-esteem to quality of life; and the need for a "renewed political arrangement with the Government of Canada."
Royal Commission on Aboriginal Peoples: Presentation by Dick Hill
Presenter discusses the administrative, economic, and demographic composition of Inuvik, Northwest Territories. Hill discusses its' ethnic composition (1/3 First Nations, 1/3 Inuit, 1/3 other), its' administrative and institutional apparatus, and related issues in response to questioning from Commissioners Rene Dussault, Allan Blakeney, Grace Blake, and Mary Sillett. Land claims and economic development are also discussed.