[Humanizing Security in the Arctic]
Idle No More
The "Idle No More" Movement: Paradoxes of First Nations Inclusion in the Canadian Context
Idle No More Movement Seeks to Educate Canadians With Teach-ins and Panel Discussions
Comments on the protest rallies against omnibus Bills C-38 and C-45.
Entire issue on one pdf. To access article scroll to p.15.
Idle No More: Protest to Change?: A Grassroots Movement
Idling in the Fast Lane of a Unique Winter
Comments on the Idle No More movement started by four Saskatchewan women to protest Prime Minister Stephen Harper's omnibus bills.
Entire issue on one pdf. To access article scroll to p.12.
The Im/possibility of Recovery in Native North American Literatures
Imagining and Visualizing “Indianness” in Trudeauvian Canada: Joyce Wieland’s The Far Shore and True Patriot Love
The Impact of Aboriginal Land Claims and Self-Government on Canadian Municipalities: The Local Government Perspective
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
Implementation of Jordan's Principle: Understanding and Addressing Disparities in Health and Social Services for Status First Nations Children Living On-Reserve
Implementing Land, Resource and Environmental Regimes under the Inuivialuit Final Agreement
Improving the State of Health Hardware in Australian Indigenous Housing: Building More Houses is Not the Only Answer
In Brief: Idle No More
In From the Margins, Part II: Reducing Barriers to Social Inclusion and Social Cohesion
In Praise of Taxes: The Link between Taxation and Good Governance in a First Nations Context
"In the Interest of the Indians": The Department of Indian Affairs, Charles Cooke and the Recruitment of Native Men in Southern Ontario for the Canadian Expeditionary Force, 1916
[In the Reign of Twilight]
Increasing the Sustainability of a Resource Development:
Aboriginal Engagement and Negotiated Agreements
Indexes of Western First Nations Bands: Languages, Agencies, Inspectorates, and Regional Offices
The Indian Act: Evolution, Overview and Options for Amendment and Transition: Final Report
Indian Agents and the Residential School System in Canada, 1946-1970
Indian and Northern Affairs Canada (INAC): Delivering Inequity to First Nations Children and Families Receiving Child Welfare Services
Comments on the inability for INAC to ensure the safety and wellbeing of children according to the United Nations Convention on the Rights of the Child or the Charter of Rights and Freedoms.
The Indian Commissioners: Agents of the State and Indian Policy in Canada's Prairie West, 1873-1932; Negotiating the Numbered Treaties: An Intellectual and Political Biography of Alexander Morris
The Indian Commissioners: Agents of the State and the Indian Policy in Canada's Prairie West, 1873-1932
Indian Residential School Litigation
Indian Rights for Indian Babies: Canada's "Unstated Paternity" Policy
Indian Status, Band Membership, First Nation Citizenship, Kinship, Gender, and Race: Reconsidering the Role of Federal Law
Discusses how legislation such as the Indian Act, with its arbitrary rules about who is considered to be an "Indian", has impacted relationships and identity in Aboriginal communities. Chapter seven from Moving Forward, Making a Difference, vol. 3, which is also vol. 5 in the Aboriginal Policy Research series. Originally presented at the second annual Aboriginal Policy Research Conference, 2006.
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.
Indigenous Contentious Collective Action in Canada: The Labrador Innu and Their Occupation of the Goose Bay Military Air Base
Indigenous Peoples of the British Dominions and the First World War
Interests and the Public Interest in Law and Public Policy: A Case Study in Aboriginal Policy in Canada
Intergenerational Trauma From a Mental Health Perspective
International Comparison of Solutions to Aboriginal Rights Issues Associated With Mineral Development: Free, Prior and Informed Consent: The Canadian Context
Introduction [Aboriginal Peoples and Canada]
An Introduction to Charles A. Cooke Within The Context of Aboriginal Identity
Introduction to Documents One Through Five: Nationalism, the League of Nations and the Six Nations of Grand River
Introduction and five archival documents chronicle Chief Levi General's attempts to have his petition regarding Iroquois nationalism heard at the Assembly of the League of Nations, the predecessor to the United Nations.
Introduction to Special Indigenous Issue
Inuit Qaujisarvingat List of References from Arctic Security Pillar Project
Inuit Relocation Policies in Canada and Other Circumpolar Countries, 1925-60: A Report for the Royal Commission on Aboriginal Peoples
Inuit Voices on Arctic Security Nilliajut
An Inventory of Collaborative Arrangements Between Aboriginal Peoples and the Canadian Forest Sector: Linking Policies to Diversification in Forms of Engagement
Investigating Social Policy Relationships: A Critical Analysis of Understandings of First Nation Family Violence
Investigating the Inuit-Canadian Government Relationship. Claiming about the Fate of Inuit Dogs and Inuit Leadership
Involve First Nations in Combating Climate Change
Discusses the need for evaluating climate change and the importance of ensuring First Nations involvement in the process.
Entire issue on one pdf. To access article scroll to p.9.