Search
At the Crossroads: Native Americans and World War II
Canada's Residential Schools: The Legacy: The Final Report of the Truth and Reconciliation Commission of Canada, Volume 5
Canada's Residential Schools. Volume 1, Part 1: The History, Origins to 1939; Canada's Residential Schools. Volume 1, Part 2: The History, 1939 to 2000; Canada's Residential Schools. Volume 2: The Inuit and Northern Experience; Canada's Residential Schools. Volume 3: The Métis Experience; Canada's Residential Schools. Volume 4: Missing Children in Unmarked Burials; Canada's Residential Schools. Volume 5: The Legacy; Canada's Residential Schools. Volume 6: Reconciliation
The Canary Effect
The Circle Game: Shadows and Substance in the Indian Residential School Experience in Canada
The Circle Game: Shadows and Substance in the Indian Residential School Experience in Canada
Circle Game: Shadows and Substance in the Residential School Experience in Canada
Colonialism as a Broader Social Determinant of Health
A Compendium of Aboriginal Healing Foundation Research
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.
"If You Knew the Conditions...": Health Care to Native Americans: An Exhibit at the National Library of Medicine, 15 April 1994-31 August 1994
Indian Record (vol. 34, #5-6, May-June, 1971)
Indian Residential Schools & Reconciliation: Teacher Resource Guide 11/12: Book 2: The Documentary Evidence
Manufacturing the Self-Healing Subject: Aboriginal Health Funding in Canada’s Era of “Truth and Reconciliation”
Qikiqtani Truth Commission: Thematic Reports and Special Studies 1950-1975
Rethinking Historical Trauma: Narratives of Resilience
Royal Commission on Aboriginal Peoples: Discussion between Commissioners and Elders Dominic Eshkakogan, Mary Lou Fox, Rita Corbiere
Royal Commission on Aboriginal Peoples: Further Comments by Babette Bastien
Royal Commission on Aboriginal Peoples: Presentation by Chief Agnes Snow, Canoe Creek Indian Band
Presentation focusing on residential schools and government policy. Snow states that because the federal government wanted to assimilate Aboriginal peoples, they have lost their languages, traditions and values. Family violence, Fetal Alcohol Syndrome, unemployment and poor physical and mental health are problematic on her First Nation, and she calls on the Commission to ensure that her First Nation continues to receive government funding to combat these social problems. A question-and-answer session with the Commissioners follows the presentation.