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Addressing the Crisis of Missing or Murdered Indigenous Persons: A Path Forward Utilizing a Structured Cold Case Investigation Protocol
American Indian and Alaska Native Knowledge and Public Health for the Primary Prevention of Missing or Murdered Indigenous Persons
Colonial Roots, Contemporary Risk Factors: A Cautionary Exploration of the Domestic Trafficking of Aboriginal Women and Girls in British Columbia, Canada
Community Resource Guide: What Can I Do to Help Families of Missing and Murdered Aboriginal Women and Girls?
Convention on the Elimination of All Forms of Discrimination against Women: Interim Report in Follow-up to the Review of Canada's Sixth and Seventh Reports
A Dark History: Missing and Murdered Indigenous Women
The Empty Shawl: Honoring Native Women by Stopping the Violence Against Them
Epistemic Injustice and Indigenous Women: Toward Centering Indigeneity in Social Work
Estimating the Magnitude of Rape and Sexual Assault Against American Indian and Alaska Native (AIAN) Women
Fact Sheet: Missing and Murdered Aboriginal Women and Girls in Alberta
Fact Sheet: Missing and Murdered Aboriginal Women and Girls in Ontario
Fact Sheet: Missing and Murdered Aboriginal Women and Girls in Quebec
Fact Sheet: Missing and Murdered Aboriginal Women and Girls in Saskatchewan
Fact Sheet: Missing and Murdered Aboriginal Women and Girls in the Atlantic Region
FBI Resources in Missing Person Cases
Gendering Self-Determination: Human Rights and the Violence against Indigenous Women
HCR33 Report: Idaho’s Missing & Murdered Indigenous Persons
In Between the Missing and Murdered: The Need for Indigenous-Led Responses to Trafficking
Indian Female Characterization in Larry Watson’s Montana 1948
Indigenous Battered Women Who Kill: A Qualitative Thematic Analysis
Indigenous Women and Violence: Feminist Activist Research in Heightened States of Injustice
Indigenous Women's Offending Patterns: A Literature Review
Intimate Partner Violence: Experiences of First Nations, Métis, Inuit women in Canada, 2018
Introduction
Introduction [Department of Justice Journal of Federal Law and Practice, vol. 69, no. 1, 2021]
Investigation Has Taken Too Long, Provided Too Few Results
Brief article describing the investigation into cases of Aboriginal women who have gone missing or have been murdered in British Columbia, and the delay in solving the cases.
Entire issue on one pdf. To access article scroll to p.20.
Meeting Survivors’ Needs: Gender-Based Violence against Inuit Women and the Criminal Justice System Response: Environmental Scan
Related Material: Final Report; Online Survey Results.
Meeting Survivors’ Needs: Gender-Based Violence against Inuit Women and the Criminal Justice System Response: Online Survey Results
Related Material: Environmental Scan; Final Report.
Missing and Murdered Indigenous Women and Girls Timeline
The Missing and Murdered Indigenous Women Crisis: Technological Dimensions # *
Missing & Murdered Indigenous People: Statewide Report Wyoming
Missing Women Investigation Review
Missing Women Investigation Review: Summary Report
A Modern Trail of Tears: The Missing and Murdered Indigenous Women (MMIW) Crisis in the US
Never Until Now: Indigenous & Racialized Women's Experiences Working in Yukon & Northern British Columbia Mine Camps
Research consisted of survey and semi-structured interviews using open-ended questions with 22 respondents. Study found: limited job opportunityand longevity of employment, inadequate pay scale for hours worked, uequal work expectations, limited opportunities for advancement, inadequate harm prevention, gender or race harassement/discrimination with absence of grievance mechanisms, poor environmental practices, and limited economic benefits to Indigenous people.
"Newsworthy" Victims?: Exploring Differences in Canadian Local Press Coverage of Missing/Murdered Aboriginal and White Women
No Action, No Progress
No More Stolen Sisters: Campaign Guide
Pacific Pathways to the Prevention of Sexual Violence: Full Report
Prevention Strategies Related to Missing or Murdered Native Americans
Questions Need to be Answered, Says Family Member of Pickton's Last Victim
Reflects on the life and personality of Mona Wilson, a victim of serial killer Robert Pickton, and the naming of a corporation after Wilson's First Nation's name, Running Bear.
Entire issue on one pdf. To access article scroll to p.8.