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Royal Commission on Aboriginal Peoples 141a: Prince George, British Columbia
Royal Commission on Aboriginal Peoples: General Discussion with Attendees and Commissioners
Royal Commission on Aboriginal Peoples: Individual Presentation by Rodney Louie
Royal Commission on Aboriginal Peoples: Presentation by Cece McAuley and Closing Remarks
McCauley comments on Aboriginal staffing issues with the Inuvik RCMP, as well as job training and government employment generally in Northern communities. Following McCauley's comments is a general discussion between Commissioners John Holman and preceding presenter George Gillies on Inuvik hospital maintenance costs.
Royal Commission on Aboriginal Peoples: Presentation by Chief Edmund Metatawabin and Cecilia Scott, Fort Albany First Nations
Royal Commission on Aboriginal Peoples: Presentation by Innu Nation, George Rich, Vice-President
Royal Commission on Aboriginal Peoples: Presentation by Mary Jane Adamson and Billy Day, Inuvialuit Communications Society
Adamson discusses the importance of Aboriginal broadcasting to not only Aboriginal but non-Aboriginal Canadians as an educational and cross-cultural understanding tool; language and educational issues; and job training in broadcasting. Billy Day comments on trapping in Inuvik; the impact of the animal rights movement on the trapping economy; land claims and conservation; relations with the RCMP; as well as education and the impact of residential schooling in the North on Aboriginal languages. Following the presentation the assembled Commissioners discuss some of the issues raised.
Royal Commission on Aboriginal Peoples: Presentation by Thelma Chalifoux, Senator Co-Chair, Metis Nation of Alberta
Royal Commission on Aboriginal Peoples: Remarks by Peter Katuk (via translator)
A Search for Justice in First Nations Communities: The Role of the RCMP and Community Policing
Setting the Context: The Policing of First Nations Communities
[Showing the Flag: The Mounted Police and Canadian Sovereignty in the North, 1894-1925]
Sir John A. Macdonald and the Mounted Police Force for the Northwest Territories
Steele Narrows: A Saskatchewan Historic Site
Historical note:
The Battle of Loon Lake concluded the Northwest Resistance on June 3 and was the last battle ever fought on Canadian soil.The Struggle For Survival of the Inuit Culture in English Literature
An Unauthorized History of the R.C.M.P.
Views from Fort Battleford: Constructed Visions of an Anglo-Canadian West
Violence Against Indigenous Women and Girls in Canada: Review of Reports and Recommendations: Preliminary Research Outcomes
When the Mounties Came: Mounted Police and Cree Relations on Two Saskatchewan Reserves
Presents a Cree perspective on contact and relationships with the Royal Canadian Mounted Police (RCMP).