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Are We Seeking Pimatisiwin or Creating Pomewin? Implications for Water Policy
"Average mail ... Lots of routine": Arthur Wellsley Vowell and the Administration of Indian Affairs in British Columbia 1889-1910
Best Left as Indians: Native-White Relations in the Yukon Territory, 1840-1950
Best Left as Indians: Native-White Relations in the Yukon Territory, 1840-1973
[Beyond Blood: Rethinking Indigenous Identity]
The Birth of a Nation: Accounting and Canada's First Nations, 1860-1900
Canada's Residential Schools: The Legacy: The Final Report of the Truth and Reconciliation Commission of Canada, Volume 5
"The Canadian Indian"
Captain Death Strikes Again: Tuberculosis and the Stó:lõ 1871-1907
Community Development at the Department of Indian Affairs in the 1960's: Much Ado About Nothing
Conquest Through Benevolence: The Indian Residential School Apology and the (Re)Making of the Innocent Canadian Settler Subject
A Crop of Broken Promises
A Curious Case of "Integrating" the Integrated: Government Education Policy and the School at Telegraph Creek, British Columbia, 1906-1951
Deal of the Century?
Desperately Seeking Absolution: Responses and a Reply
Don't You Hear the Red Man Calling?
Includes correspondence and quotes from a range of public and private individuals including Hume, Frank Pedley, John Hines, church officials, a Report of Special Indian Committee (1908) on policies, the state of health, death, and education in industrial and residential schools.
Enhancing Aboriginal Participation in Northern Land Use Planning
Eskimo Identification and Disc Numbers: A Brief History
Evaluation of Aboriginal Programs: What Place is Given to Participation and Cultural Sensitivity?:
The Facts Respecting Indian Administration in the North-West
Fanning the Flames: Racism in Government Recommendations for the Prevention of Deaths by Fire on First Nations Reserves
First Nation Land Surrenders on the Prairies 1896-1911
Comprehensive study of the extensive occurrence of reserve surrender drawing attention to patterns revealed through policies and practices of the Crown.
The Government of Canada and the Inuit: 1900-1967
Historical Timeline: From 1700s to the Present
History of Canadian Indians: 1763-1840
History of Canadian Indians: 1840-1867
Overview of the history of First Nations people, with special attention given to New Brunswick, Nova Scotia and Prince Edward Island. Topics covered include: education, legal status and the Indian Affairs Department. Excerpt from: Canada and Its Provinces, Vol. V, edited by Adam Shortt and Arthur Doughty.
History of Canadian Indians: 1867-1912
Overview of the history of First Nations, dealt with by area: North-West, South Saskatchewan, Eastern Canada, British Columbia and Yukon. The author also has sections to discuss Sioux and Eskimo (Inuit)) issues. Excerpt from: Canada and Its Provinces, Vol. VII, edited by Adam Shortt and Arthur G. Doughty.
“In the Best Interest of the Indians”: An Ethnohistory of the Canadian Department of Indian Affairs, 1897-1913
Indian Agents and the "Indian Problem" in 1946: Reconsidering the Theory of Coercive Tutelage
The Indian Agents of Fort Chipewyan: Bureaucrats in Isolation
Indian and Northern Affairs Canada (INAC): Delivering Inequity to First Nations Children and Families Receiving Child Welfare Services
Comments on the inability for INAC to ensure the safety and wellbeing of children according to the United Nations Convention on the Rights of the Child or the Charter of Rights and Freedoms.
Indian Children Taken Illegally
The Indian Pass System in the Canadian West, 1882-1935
Indian Residential Schools & Reconciliation: Teacher Resource Guide 11/12: Book 2: The Documentary Evidence
Institutionalized Racism in Canada: The Department of Indian Affairs and Framing Perspectives on Indigenous Peoples and Categorizations of Health
Ken Coates in Inside Policy: Five priorities for Aboriginal Canada in election 2015
Ken S. Coates. Best Left as Indians: Native-White Relations in the Yukon Territory, 1840-1973
Legislated Oppression: Racism, Patriarchy and Colonialism in the Status Provisions of the Indian Act
Liberalism, Surveillance, and Resistance : Indigenous Communities in Western Canada, 1877-1927
Liberalism, Surveillance, and Resistance: Indigenous Communities in Western Canada, 1877-1927
Liberalism, Surveillance and Resistance: Indigenous Communities in Western Canada, 1877-1927
Like an Ill-Fitting Boot: Government, Governance and Management Systems in the Contemporary Indian Act
Man on the Spot: John Daly, Indian Agent in Parry Sound, 1922-1939
"Mr. Burk is Most Interested in Their Welfare": J.G. Burk's Campaign to Help the Anishinabeg of Northwestern Ontario, 1923-53
The Native Interface: An Emerging Role in Government-Native Relations
Native Participation in Public Policy Making and the Advancement of Native Interests in Northern Canada: A Case Study of the Porcupine Caribou Management Board
New Minister Announces Policy Shift
Aboriginal leaders at the 1999 Treaty 4 commemorations in Fort Qu'Appelle, Saskatchewan are hopeful as newly appointed Minister of Indian Affairs, Robert Nault, states the time has come for federal government to move towards treaty implementation as a way of defining its relationship with First Nations.
Entire issue on one pdf. To access article scroll to p.3.