1988 Report of the Auditor General of Canada [to the House of Commons]: Chapter 14: Department of Indian Affairs and Northern Development
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Author/Creator
[Kenneth M. Dye]
Looks at the passing of Canada's Bill C-92 and what it could learn from the United States' Indian Child Welfare Act in regards to the well-being and care of Indigenous children.
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.
Compares the cost of complying with the Canadian Human Rights Tribunal decision to settling a class action suit.
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.
Young children's about the long fight for equal funding for First Nations' education before the Canadian Human Rights Tribunal.