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Chiefs Reject Executive-Negotiated Governance Plan
Reports on the varied reasons why First Nations chiefs rejected the Indian Affairs Minister’s proposed joint governance consultation process to change the Indian Act.
Entire issue on one pdf. To access article scroll to p.6.
First (National) Space: (Ab)original (Re)Mappings of British Columbia
Fiscal Management Law Major Native Milestone
From Clan to Ḵwaan to Corporation: The Continuing Complex Evolution of Tlingit Political Organization
From Clan to Kwéan to Corporation: The Continuing Complex Evolution of Tlingit Political Organization
Inquiry into the Claim of the Homalco Indian Band
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.
The New York Oneidas: A Case Study in the Mismatch of Cultural Tradition and Economic Development
On Reserve Status Indian Voter Participation in the Maritimes
On the Land: Confronting the Challenges to Aboriginal Self-Determination in Northern Quebec and Labrador
A Place at the Table: The United Nations Established a Historic New Forum for Indigenous Issues. What Will it Mean for Native Peoples Around the World?
Political Participation of Inuit Women in the Government of Nunavut
Polygone de Tir Aérien de Primrose Lake II - Rapport D'Enquête: Joseph Bighead, Buffalo River, Waterhen Lake, Flying Dust
Primrose Lake Air Weapons Range Report II: Joseph Bighead First Nation Inquiry, Buffalo River First Nation Inquiry, Waterhen Lake First Nation Inquiry, Flying Dust First Nation Inquiry
Referendum in B.C. Doesn't Mean Much
Sit Down and Drink Your Beer: Regulating Vancouver's Beer Parlours, 1925-1954
Toward a Great Sioux Nation Judicial Support Center and Supreme Court: An Interim Planning and Recommendation Report for the Wakpa Sica Historical Society's Reconciliation Place Project
Treaty Referendum Questions Called 'Ridiculous'
Questions a referendum proposed by B. C. treaty negotiators, arguing that the rights of a minority (First Nations) were being placed in front of a majority (constituents) and that some questions asked address rights already affirmed in Canadian courts and the Constitution.
Entire issue on one pdf. To access article scroll to p.11.