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De-Stereotyping Hybrids/Half-Breeds: A Postcolonial Reading of In Search of April Raintree
Decolonizing Métis Pedagogies in Post-Secondary Settings
“Destined to Raise Her Caste”: Sarah Ballenden and the Foss-Pelly Scandal
Devalued People: The Status of the Métis in the Justice System
The Devil's Northern Triangle: Howard Adams and Métis Multidimensional Relationships With and Within Colonialism
Dezerman Courtoreille (St. Germaine) Interview
Director, Journal Of the Anthropological Institute of Great Britain, "The Mixed or 'Half-Breed' Races of North-Western Canada", by A. P. Reid, 1875.
Discrimination and Identity
Disempowerment to Empowerment: Issues of Identity Politics in the Works of Beatrice Culleton, Jeannette Armstrong and Tomson Highway
Disinherited Generations: Our Struggle to Reclaim Treaty Rights for First Nations Women and Their Descendants
The Dispersal of the Métis
Dispossession vs. Accommodation in Plaintiff vs. Defendent Accounts of Métis Dispersal from Manitoba, 1870-1881
Don McLean Interview
Don Nielson Interview 1
Don Nielson Interview 2
Don’t Tell Us Who We Are (Not): Reflections on Métis Identity
Dr. Russell's Carlton Trail
“Eastern Métis” Studies and White Settler Colonialism Today
Education, Employment, and Income Polarization among Aboriginal Men and Women in Canada
The Edwin Brooks Letters: Part I
Brooks moved from eastern Canada to what is now Indian Head in the spring of 1882; went into partnership in with George P. Murray to form Murray and Brooks, General Merchants, 1883. In 1885 he sat on the jury that found Louis Riel Guilty of High Treason. Letters contain some commentary on local Indigenous peoples, events and settler-Indigenous and government-Indigenous relations. Entire issue on one pdf file, scroll to page 104
The Edwin Brooks Letters: Part II
Brooks moved from eastern Canada to what is now Indian Head in the spring of 1882; went into partnership in with George P. Murray to form Murray and Brooks, General Merchants, 1883. In 1885 he sat on the jury that found Louis Riel Guilty of High Treason. Letters contain some commentary on local Indigenous peoples, events and settler-Indigenous and government-Indigenous relations. Entire issue on one pdf file, scroll to page 30
The Edwin Brooks Letters: Part III
Brooks moved from eastern Canada to what is now Indian Head in the spring of 1882; went into partnership in with George P. Murray to form Murray and Brooks, General Merchants, 1883. In 1885 he sat on the jury that found Louis Riel Guilty of High Treason. Letters contain some commentary on local Indigenous peoples, events and settler-Indigenous and government-Indigenous relations. Entire issue on one pdf file, scroll to page 67.