Addressing Gendered Violence against Inuit Women: A Review of Police Policies and Practices in Inuit Nunangat
American Indian & Alaska Native Grandfamilies: Helping Children Thrive through Connection to Family and Cultural Identity: Toolkit
Children Lost through Welfare
Colonial Policies and Indigenous Women in Canada
Colonialsim, Archives and Yukon First Nations: A Guide to Public Records in Yukon Archives Documenting the History Colonization in Yukon
Colonization, Homelessness, and the Prostitution and Sex Trafficking of Native Women
COVID-19, the Numbered Treaties and the Politics of Life: A Special Report
Crosscurrents - No. 61, February 1980.
Historical note:
Crosscurrents is a journal based in Saskatoon, with offices at 134 Avenue F South.Decriminalizing Race: The Case for Investing in Community and Social Support for Racialized Women in Canada
Development of an UNDRIP Compliance Assessment Tool: How a Performance Framework Could Improve State Compliance
Looks at how the the United Nations Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples (UNDRIP) tool reflects the status of Indigenous rights by its compliance.
Disaggregated Demographic Data Collection British Columbia: The Grandmother Perspective
Drawing upon the Wealth of Indigenous Laws in the Yukon
Echo: Ethnographic, Cultural and Historical Overview of Yukon's First Peoples
Education in Movement Spaces: Standing Rock to Chicago Freedom Square
The Ethical Space of Engagement Between Indigenous Women and Girls of a Drum Circle and White, Settler Men of a Police Chorus: Implications for Policing Ideology, Policies, and Practices
Eukuan nin matshi-manitu innushkueu = I Am a Damned Savage: Tanite nene etutamin nitassi? = What Have You Done to My Country?
Examining Police Policies and Practices in Mi’kma’ki – Pathways to
Positive Policing Relationships
Exhibits of Truth and Reconciliation: Creating Empathetic Spaces for Indigenous Narratives in Canada
"Healing on Both Sides": Strengthening the Effectiveness of Prison–Indigenous Community Partnerships Through Reciprocity and Investment
Examines the participation of inmates in the Work 2 Give program, were the inmates made items for Indigenous communities, and how participation in the program helped with the inmates healing process.
Heart Work: Weaving Relationality into Métis Material Culture Repatriation
The Highway of Tears
“In the Best Interest of the Indians”: An Ethnohistory of the Canadian Department of Indian Affairs, 1897-1913
The Inconvenient Indian
Documentary inspired by the non-fiction book of the same name by Thomas King explores historical attitudes and efforts to colonize Indigenous peoples and contemporary expressions of resistance.
Duration: 1h, 29 min.
Indian and Inuit Family Law and the Canadian Legal System
Indigenous Information Literacy
Intergenerational Imprisonment: Resistance and Resilience in Indigenous Communities
It's Our Time: First Nations Education Tool Kit: Teacher's Guide (National and Manitoba)
Lost and Forgotten: Sex Workers on Vancouver's Downtown Eastside
Missing and Murdered Indigenous Women and Girls in Canada: Gender, Indigeneity, and Genocide
Missing and Murdered Indigenous Women and Girls in Tiohtiá:ke/Montreal: Towards a Meaningful Collaboration
between the SPVM and Indigenous Communities
Missing and Murdered Indigenous Women Task Force: A Report to the Minnesota Legislature
The Moccasin Identifier Education Kit
NAGPRA's Politics of Recognition: Repatriation Struggles of a Terminated Tribe
The New Deal and American Indian Tribalism: The Administration of the Indian Reorganization Act, 1934-45
nîpawistamâsowin: We Will Stand Up [Shorter Version]
Our Betrayed Wards: A Story of "Chicanery, Infidelity and the Prostitution of Trust"
Originally published in 1921. This version transcribed, curated and with additions. The author was the Indian Agent for the "Blood and Peigan" Indians from 1898 to 1911.
Our Health Counts Thunder Bay Factsheets
Survey conducted using Respondent-Driven Sampling resulted in 601 adult and 229 child surveys being completed. In addition to health questions respondents were asked about other topics such as culture, identity, housing, discrimination, and access to justice.
“Ours from the top to the very bottom”: Seneca Land, Colonial Development, Proto-Conservation, and Resistance in the Early American Republic
Police Services and Inuit in Nunavik (Arctic Québec): Knowing Each Other Better to Help Each Other Better
Questioning Indigenous-Settler Relations: Interdisciplinary Perspectives
Questions about Questions: Law and Film Reflections on the Duty to Learn
Race Politics in Australia: Aborigines, Politics and Law
Re-membering Cherokee Justice in Ruth Muskrat Bronson's "The Serpent"
Repertoires for Supporting Sovereignty: The Protocols for Native American Archival Materials and Dance Information in Vancouver
Riel Project / Bulletin / du Projet Riel - No.4. - October / Octobre 1980.
Historical note:
The purpose of the Riel project is to publish a critical edition of all the writings of Louis Riel. The edition is to present a printed version faithful to what Riel himself wrote, being "critical" in the sense that errors will be noted, variants recorded, and annotations furnished. In English / French.Running for Missing and Murdered Women: Expansion of Tribal Court Criminal Jurisdiction
Saskatchewan Survival Gathering - 9-13 October 1980.
The System Is "Broken": Concrete Actions Are Needed to End Systemic Discrimination: A Joint Brief Presented by The Assembly of First Nations Quebec-Labrador (AFNQL) and The First Nations of Quebec and Labrador Health and Social Services Commission (FNQLHSSC)
Systemic Racism in Policing in Canada: Submission to the House of Commons Standing Committee on Public Safety and National Security
Reports findings from field research conducted in northern British Columbia in 2012 and Saskatchewan in 2016/17 with respect to Royal Canadian Mounted Police (RCMP) and municipal police interactions with Indigenous women and girls.