Research Reveals Discrimination, Explodes Stereotypes
Michael Mendelson, a senior scholar at the Caledon Institute of Social Policy in Toronto, suggests discrimination on the part of Canadian government policies in regards to the delivering and funding of Aboriginal education.
Entire issue on one pdf. To access article scroll to p.9.
Reshaping Crown-First Nation Relationships Amid Changing Contexts: An Examination of the Intersection Between the Crown’s Promise of a New Relationship and the Implementations of the Forest and Range Agreement
The Residential School Experience: Residual Effects Upon First Nations Students in Their Understanding and Mastery of Tasks Within the Mathematics Curriculum
Residential Schools: Did They Really Close or Just Morph Into Child Welfare?
Resource Development in Canada: A Case Study on the Ring of Fire
A Resource Kit to Assist Speech-Language Pathologists and Audiologists in Providing Informed Services to First Nations, Inuit, and Métis People
Responses From Aboriginal Women in Seven (7) INAC-Funded Shelters Regarding Matrimonial Real Property (MRP)
Rethinking Child Welfare Reform in British Columbia, 1900-60
Revisiting Inuit Qaujimajatuqangit: Inuit Knowledge, Culture, Language, and Values in Nunavut Institutions Since 1999
Revisiting RCAP: Towards Reconciliation: The Future of Indigenous Governance: Symposium Discussion Paper
Revisiting the Duty to Consult Aboriginal Peoples
Rights and Responsibilities: Discussion Guide About Treaty Negotiations For First Nation Members
"The Rights to the Land May Be Transferred": Archival Records as Colonial Text - A Narrative of Metis Scrip
The Rising of the Ongwehònwe: Sovereignty, Identity, and Representation of the Six Nations Reserve
The Role of the Public Sector in Northern Governance
The Roots of Inuktitut-Language Bilingual Education
Roseau River Anishinabe First Nation 1903 Surrender Inquiry
The Rule and Role of Law: The Duty to Consult, Aboriginal Communities, and the Canadian Natural Resource Sector
Sandy Bay Ojibway First Nation Treaty Land Entitlement Inquiry
Sandy Bay Ojibway First Nation, Treaty Land Entitlement Inquiry, Public Edition - October 2007
FILES CAN ONLY BE ACCESSED USING FIREFOX BROWSER. Consists of historical documents, maps, legal documents, correspondence/letters, Field notes, excerpts, submissions, transcrips and the Inquiry Report in French and English. [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.]
Saskatchewan First Nations and the Province's Resource Future: The Path to Economic Certainty
The Saskatchewan First Nations Veterans’ Association: Issues Paper
Saskatchewan Veterans Reach Out to Country
Presents the views held by the Federation of Saskatchewan Indian Nations and the Assembly of Manitoba Chiefs regarding unfulfilled veterans’ benefits. The feeling is that First Nations veterans need to get organized, on a national level, to lobby the federal government in order to be heard.
Entire issue on one pdf. To access article scroll to p.7.
Saulteau First Nation Treaty Land Entitlement and Lands in Severalty Inquiry
Scars of Empire: A Juxtaposition of Duncan Campbell Scott and Jacques Soustelle
School Governance On-Reserve: An Unsatisfactory State of Affairs
A Second Look at the First Nations Control of First Nations Education Act
Seeking Common Ground / Trouver Un Terrain D'Entente: Politics of National Park Establishment in the Torngat Mountains, Arctic Canada
Seeking “Mamatowisowin” to Create an Engaging Social
Policy Class for Aboriginal Students
Seeking Reform of Indigenous Education in Canada: Democratic Progress or Democratic Colonialism?
Self-Government Agreements and Jurisdiction in Education
Senior Governments Walk Away From Métis Election
Sentencing and the Prevention of Youth Crime: A Multi-Disciplinary, Multi-Institutional Approach
Sentencing Disparity: Aboriginal Canadians, Drunk Driving and Age
SERC 2: Natural Resources, Local Development, Social Economic Enterprises and Rural Revitalization in Alberta: Summary
Services for Sex Trade Workers Need More Support
Discusses how programs that aid sex trade workers require continued government support in order to maintain the much needed services.
Entire issue on one pdf. To access article scroll to p.22.
The Settlement Process: A Personal Reflection
The Sex Trafficking of Women into Canada: Exploring the Government's Approach to Prevention, Protection, and Prosecution
Shadow of the Headframe
Sharing Canada's Prosperity - A Hand Up, Not A Handout: Final Report: Special Study on the Involvement of Aboriginal Communities and Businesses in Economic Development Activities in Canada
Shifting Riel-ity: The 1885 North-West Rebellion
Looks at Canadian government's military response to the potential uprising and how perceptions of the conflict have changed over time.
Originally appeared as Thunder on the Prairies in the February-March issues of Canada's History.