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'Animated Like Us by Commercial Interests': Commercial Ethnology and Fur Trade Descriptions in New France, 1660-1760
B.C. Bishops Call for Referendum Protest
B.C. Referendum Bodes Ill for Native Rights
Battling Parish Priests, Bootleggers, and Fur Sharks: CCF Colonialism in Northern Saskatchewan
The Border Crossed Us: Border Crossing Issues of the Indigenous Peoples of the Americas
Canada, Inc.
The Relevance of Ideology to the Emergence of a Capitalist Social Formation in Rupert's Land and the "Indian Territories" of British North American, 1852 to 1885
Case Study of the Development of the 1998 Tribal State Agreement in Minnesota
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.
Chretien Should Look For a Graceful Exit
Churches, Government Still Squabbling Over School Issue
Focuses on the residential school survivors conference theme of pressure strategies for improved claim resolution
Entire issue on one pdf. To access article scroll to p.14.
Closing the Gaps? The Politics of Māori Affairs Policy
The Color of the Land: Race, Nation, and the Politics of Landownership in Oklahoma, 1832-1929
The Crown's Fiduciary Relationship with Aboriginal Peoples
Overview of the unique legal and constitutional position of Aboriginal peoples in Canada from the Royal Proclamation of 1763 to 2002. Revised version. Originally published August 2000.
Dividing Alaska: Native Claims, Statehood and Wilderness Preservation
The Duty to Consult With Non-Status Indians: Mi'kmaq Politics and Crown Responsibilities in Nova Scotia
Filling Up the Land with Pilalt: Countering the British Columbia Referrals Process and Reclaiming Stó:lō Ways of Being on the Land
The First Nations Governance Act: Implications of Research Findings From the United States and Canada: A Report of the British Columbia Regional Vice-Chief Assembly of First Nations
Argues that the key purpose of the First Nations Governance Act is to assist in building societies that work and are capable of of realizing their own goals.
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
Fuss Over Indian Act Misses Fundamental Point
A Glimmer of Hope: A Review of Recent Works on the Relations between Indigenous Peoples and Settler Society
History and Politics of the 'New Relationship'
Increasing the Sustainability of a Resource Development:
Aboriginal Engagement and Negotiated Agreements
Last to the Ballot Box
Liberalism, Surveillance, and Resistance: Indigenous Communities in Western Canada, 1877-1927
Maan Pii Nde' Eng: A Debwewin Journey Through the Algonquin Land Claims and Self-Government Process
The Monacan Indian Nation: Asserting Tribal Sovereignty in the Absence of Federal Recognition
Native Leaders Must Be Positive Agents of Change
Native Leadership About to Undergo Change
The Need for a Principled Framework to Effectively Negotiate and Implement the Aboriginal Right to Self-Government in Canada
Negotiating the Production of Space in Tl'azt'en Territory, Northern British Columbia
New Era Talk in B.C. Is a Page From the Fed's Book
Comments on the treaty talks between First Nations peoples and British Columbia government.
Continuation of article on page 6 entitled Does the New Language Mean a New Approach?
Entire issue on one pdf. To access article scroll to p.10.
Nunavut : The Construction of a Regional Collective Identity in the Canadian Arctic
NWAC Position Paper: The Social Union Framework Agreement
A Place in the Memory of Nation: Minority Policy Towards the Finnish Speakers in Sweden and Norway
Political Participation of Inuit Women in the Government of Nunavut
Powerful or Just Plain Power-Full? A Power Analysis
of Impact and Benefit Agreements in Canada’s North
Public Space, Democracy, and Colonialism: British Columbia's Referendum on Treaty Principles
Referendum in B.C. Doesn't Mean Much
Representing Aboriginal Self-Government and First Nations/State Relations: Political Agency and the Management of the Boreal Forest in Eeyou Istchee
The Saami and the National Parliaments: Channels for Political Influence
Sami Citizenship: Marginalization or Integration?
Shifting Boundaries: Aboriginal Identity, Pluralist Theory, and the Politics of Self-Government in Canada
Stifling Native Organizations Could Backfire
"Tapwewin 'Speaking the Truth' Muskeg Lake Cree Nation Reflections on Community"
There's Frustration in Indian Country
Throne Speech Nothing But Rhetoric
Treaty Federalism in Northern Canada: Aboriginal-Government Land Claims Boards
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.