Do Governments Have a Duty to Consult First Nations About Proposed Legislative Amendments?
Do Tripartite Approaches to Reform of Services for First Nations Make a Difference: A Study of Three Sectors
Doctor, Lawyer, Indian Chief...: Dependency Among the Maliseet and the Impact of the Indian Act
Documents: Introduction
Documents Two and Three: Dene/Metis Agreement in Principle with the Federal Government and Introduction
Introduction and two documents related to the signing of the Agreement-In-Principal between the Déne and Métis of the North West Territories and Government of Canada resolving a land claim of the Native people.
Does the Residential School ADR Process Effect Reconciliation?
Doing Public History in Canada's Truth and Reconciliation Commission
Domestic Sex Trafficking of Aboriginal Girls in Canada:
Issues and Implications
Domesticating Doctrines: Aboriginal Peoples After the Royal Commission
Don’t Tell Us Who We Are (Not): Reflections on Métis Identity
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.
Double Discrimination and Equality Rights of Indigenous Women in Quebec
Double Standard Applies to Running Trust Funds
Draft Agreement on Governance Ready for Chiefs to Consider [Amendments to Indian Act]
Viewpoint of National Chief Matthew Coon Come as he lobbies to have Assembly of First Nations issues included in the federal government's First Nations Governance draft agreement.
Entire issue on one pdf. To access article scroll to p.8.
[Draft Justice Framework to Address Violence Against Aboriginal Women and Girls]
Dreamcatcher 22: Commissions of Inquiry and Aboriginal Criminal Justice Reforms
[Drinking Water in Ontario First Nations Communities: Present Challenges and Future Directions for On-Reserve Water Treatment in the Province of Ontario]
Driven Apart: the Construction of Women as Worker-Citizens and Mother-Citizens in Canadian Employment and Child Care Policies, 1940-1988
Duck Lake Agency - Ledger 1885-89, 1921-29
Historical note:
Harold Nelson Woodsworth served as an Indian Agent at a number of agencies in Saskatchewan.[Duck Lake Agency] Outgoing Correspondence Ledger
Historical note:
Harold Nelson Woodsworth served as an Indian Agent at a number of agencies in Saskatchewan.[Duck Lake Agency] - Photographs - Lovilette's House
Historical note:
Harold Nelson Woodsworth served as an Indian Agent at a number of agencies in Saskatchewan.Due North: James Madison, the American Modern Wall of Separation, and the Canadian Indian Residential Schools: New Lessons Concerning Older Notions about the Separation of Church and State
Duncan’s First Nation Inquiry: 1928 Surrender Claim
Duncan's First Nation Wrongful Surrender Claim, Public Edition, September 2008
FILES CAN ONLY BE ACCESSED USING FIREFOX BROWSER. Contents consist of historical documents, maps, reports, legal documents, transcripts, correspondence/letters, submissions and the Inquiry Report in English and French versions. [These files were created and compiled by the ICC and provided to the Indigenous Studies Portal in 2009 to make widely available in online format.]
Duty, Breach and Remedy: A Fiduciary Argument for Government Funding of Aboriginal Health
Duty to Consult
Duty to Consult
The Duty to Consult Doctrine and Representative Structures for Consultation with Métis Communities and Non-Status Indian Communities
Analyzes implications of case law for off-reserve communities and for governments' interactions with them. Discusses the related issue of what forms of governance institutions and/or corporate organizations can pursue consultation on behalf of communities.
Duty to Consult Does Not Apply to All Aboriginal Concerns
'Duty to Consult', Environmental Impacts, and Métis Indigenous Knowledge
The Duty to Consult Indigenous Peoples
Dysfunctional Governance: Eleven Barriers to Progress Among Canada’s First Nations
‘‘Each year the Indians flexed their muscles a little more’’: The Maliseet Defence of Aboriginal Fishing Rights on the St. John River, 1945–1990
Economic Development in First Nations: An Overview of Current Issues
The Economic Impact of the Public Sector Upon the Indians of British Columbia: An Examination of the Incidence of Taxation and Expenditure of Three Levels of Government
The Economics of Reconciliation: Tracing Investment in Indigenous-settler Relations
Editor's Introduction: Lessons from Research [Volume 6, Number 1]
Editorial: It Takes All of Us to Enforce the Law
Education Act Will Be an Erosion of Treaty Rights, Says Fox
Looks at a meeting held between the Assembly of First Nations and the federal government to discuss First Nations education.
Entire issue on one pdf. To access article scroll to p.16.
Education and the American Indian, The Road to Self Determination Since 1928
Education Consultations Marred by Bloody Saskatoon Skirmish
Looks at a meeting held by Aboriginal Affairs Canada to discuss the proposed First Nations Education Act.
Entire issue on one pdf. To access article scroll to p.24.
Education, Culture and Identity in Rita Joe's "Keskmsi"
Education for Subordination: Redressing the Adverse Effects of Residential Schooling
Focus is on the fiduciary obligations of the government and the churches.
Education Work: Canadian Schools and the Emergence of Indigenous Social Movements
Effective Consultation and Participation in Environmental Assessment and Land Use Planning: Advancing Sustainable Development in a Remote First Nations Community in Northern Ontario, Canada
Effective First Nations Governance: Navigating the Legacy of Colonization
Eighth Annual Report of the Board of Indian Commissioners for the Year 1876.
Historical note:
Harold Nelson Woodsworth served as an Indian Agent at a number of agencies in Saskatchewan.