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Australia's Efforts to Improve Food Security for Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Peoples
A Critical Examination of Canada's Obligations Under the Convention on the Elimination of all Forms of Discrimination Against Women and the Government's Actions and Omissions in Relation to the Investigation of the Hundreds of Missing Aboriginal Women
The Delivery of Pharmaceutical Health Care in Nunavut, Canada: Language, Culture and Policy
Dietary Intake of Vitamin D in a Northern Canadian Dené First Nation Community
Employment and Literacy Issues of Canada's Aboriginal Population: National Skills Upgrade 2014
Engaging with Indigenous Australia: Exploring the Conditions for Effective Relationships with Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Communities
"Errors Exposed": Inuit Relocations to the High Arctic, 1953-1960
Evaluation of the Aboriginal Peoples Program 2009-10 to 2013-14
First Nations Child and Family Caring Society of Canada and Assembly of First Nations and Canadian Human Rights Commission and Attorney General of Canada (Representing the Minister of Indian Affairs and Northern Development Canada) and Chiefs of Ontario and Amnesty International Decision
Food for Thought: Access to Food in Canada’s Remote North
Food for Thought: Access to Food in Canada's Remote North
The Impact of Australian Policy Regimes on Indigenous Population Movement: Evidence from the 2001 Census
Provides statistics on population distribution, propensity to move by age, sex, and remoteness of community, and migration to more accessible regions.
Chapter fifteen from Moving Forward, Making a Difference, vol. 1, which is also vol. 3 in the Aboriginal Policy Research series.
Originally presented at the second annual Aboriginal Policy Research Conference, 2006.
Implementation Evaluation of the Nutrition North Canada Program: Final Report
Improving the State of Health Hardware in Australian Indigenous Housing: Building More Houses is Not the Only Answer
Indigenous Broadband Policy Advocacy in Canada's Far North
Discusses the history of Indigenous engagement with media and telecommunication policy and looks at how a consortium composed of academic researchers and First Nations technology organizations used hearings held by the Canadian Radio-television and Telecommunications Commission (CRTC) to bring three issues to the forefront: open access to transport networks; subsidy support for First Nations community networks; and the need for consultation with Indigenous communities about infrastructure development and service upgrades taking place in their territories.