Bringing Culture in: Community Responses to Apology, Reconciliation, and Reparations
[The Brothertown Nation of Indians: Land Ownership and Nationalism in Early America, 1740-1840]
Building Bridges: Towards a First Nation Development Cost Charge Program
Building New Relations: Nisichawayasihk Cree Nation, Manitoba Hydro, and the Proposed Wuskwatim Project
Canada and the Multinational State
Canada's Most Vulnerable: Identifying Health Care for First Nations, Inuit, and Métis Seniors
The Carcross/Tagish First Nation Self-Government Agreement Among The Carcoss/Tagish First Nation and Her Majesty the Queen in Right of Canada and The Government of the Yukon
Cash Back: A Yellowhead Institute Red Paper
Caughnawaga (Kahnawá:ke): Settler Accounts to 1900
Primarily newspaper articles.
CCP Handbook: Comprehensive Community Planning for First Nations in British Columbia: Developed in Partnership with First Nation CCP Champions across British Columbia
The Changing Role of the Chief on a California Indian Reservation
Charting Continuation: Understanding Post-Traditional Six Nations Militarism, 1814-1930
Chasing Paper: Forms over Function in First Nation Administration
The Cherokee Struggle for Lovely's Purchase
Chiefs Favor "Tinkering" with Act: Dorey
Chief and president Dwight Dorey of the Congress of Aboriginal Peoples (CAP) advocates First Nations return to traditional tribal governing entities.
Entire issue on one pdf. To access article scroll to p.1.
Chiefs on a Podium
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.
Chiefs Right to Reject CAP as a Legitimate Voice
Chiefs Should Rule the Day, Not Tories
Child and Family Well-Being Law Making Resource Bundle
Designed for First Nations wanting to establish their own laws in response to the Act respecting First Nations, Inuit and Métis children, youth and families (Bill C-92).
Church Woes in US Could Help Lawsuits in Canada
Discusses whether the federal government will choose to initiate alternative dispute resolution as opposed to litigation in resolving the 700 Indian Residential school lawsuits in British Columbia.
Entire issue on one pdf. To access article scroll to p.7.
Churches Join First Nation in Push for Water Policy
Clifford Sifton and Canadian Indian Administration, 1896-1905
Closing the Gaps in Aboriginal Health
Co-operative Resource Management as an Adaptive Strategy for Aboriginal Communities: the Whitefish Lake First Nation Case Study
Collaborative Consent and British Columbia's Water: Towards Watershed Co-Governance
The Colonial Office and the Prairies in the Mid-Nineteenth Century
Colonialsim, Archives and Yukon First Nations: A Guide to Public Records in Yukon Archives Documenting the History Colonization in Yukon
Colonization, Racism and the Health of Indian People
Community Liaison Committee - Intercultural Dialogue Conference
Community Life and Governance: Early Experiences of Mnjikaning First Nation with Casino Rama
Community to Community Forum Application Kit
Confluence: Water as an Analytic of Indigenous Feminisms
Constructing Identity Through Language: Water at Walpole Island First Nation
Contract With Native America: Tribal Colleges Can Help Mobilize Native American vote
Courts Poor Venue to Resolve Treaty Land Claims
COVID-19 in Manitoba: Public Policy Responses to the First Wave
Wanda Phillips-Beck
A Cultural Framework For Cree Self-Government: Retracing Our Steps Back
Current Health Services, Chapter 3
The Dakota of the Canadian Northwest: Lessons for Survival (Book Review)
Dances With 'Religion': A Critical History of the Strategic Uses of the Category of Religion by the Government of Canada and First Nations, 1885 to 1951
Dancing the Rice: Aboriginal Self-Government is the Community Reclaiming Traditional Cultural Values Mnoomini-Gaawin: Nishinaabe Gimaawin na Dani-Daapinaawaa Nishinaabe oodenoo
Data Colonialism in Canada's Chemical Valley: Aamjiwnaang First Nation and the Failure of the Pollution Notification System
Discusses the area of Ontario where 40 percent of Canada's petrochemicals are processed and refined and where full information about events such as spills, flares, air releases, and even everyday cumulative exposures is not supplied to the First Nation due to the industry-governed notification system and inadequate regulatory legislation.