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Aboriginal Title
Aboriginal Title and Indigenous Peoples: Canada, Australia, and New Zealand
After the Spirit Sang: Aboriginal Canadian and Museum Policy in the New Millennium
The Alberta Dis-Advantage: Métis Issues and the Public Discourse in Wild Rose Country
Are We There Yet?: Ten Years on from the Decade of Reconciliation: A Reconciliation Progress Report
BC First Peoples 12: Teacher Resource Guide
Bearing the Burden: The Effects of Mining on First Nations in British Columbia
Beyond the Indian Act: Restoring Aboriginal Property Rights
Bibliography on Indigenous Rights in Canada, 1995-2022
Exhaustive list (856 pages).
Black Lines, White Spaces: Towards Decoding a Rhetoric of Indian Identity
Brian Cladoosby: The Swinomish Indian Tribal Community's Approach to Governance and Intergovernmental Relations
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
Canada’s North: What’s the Plan?
Caring Across Boundaries: Is This Our Canada?
The Case Of Te Karaka: Ngāi Tahu Print Media Before And After Settlement
Case Study of the Development of the 1998 Tribal State Agreement in Minnesota
Caughnawaga (Kahnawá:ke): Settler Accounts to 1900
Primarily newspaper articles.
Chiefs Turn Up the Heat on Treaty Rights
Comments on issues of treaty rights and fair revenues from reserve resources, and discusses a contract between Onion Lake Cree Nation and an Asian government to build a refinery on Cree land.
Entire issue on one pdf. To access article scroll to p.8.
The Color of the Land: Race, Nation, and the Politics of Landownership in Oklahoma, 1832-1929
"The Coming Tide": Viewpoints of the Formation of U.S. Federal Indian Policy, 1945-1954
Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples
Defining Aboriginal Rights to Water in Alberta: Do They Still "Exist"? How Extensive are They?
Design of Forest Tenure Institutions: The Challenges of Governing Forests
Determining the “Core of Indianness:” A Feminist Political Economy of NIL/TU,O v. BCGEU
Dialogue about Land Justice: Papers from the National Native Title Conferences
Does Climate Change Redefine Sovereignty?
Don't Think of Self-Government: The Debate Over Which Language Should Govern Aboriginal Peoples' Relationship With The State
Duty to Consult
The Duty to Consult: New Relationships With Aboriginal Peoples
The Duty to Consult With Non-Status Indians: Mi'kmaq Politics and Crown Responsibilities in Nova Scotia
The Economic Urgency of Water Rights
Brief article discusses the issues surrounding water allocation to First Nations and the difficulties in resolving the problem due to conflicting jurisdictions.
Entire issue on one pdf. To access article scroll to p.13.
Emancipation as Oppression: The Marshall Decision and Self-Government
Filling Up the Land with Pilalt: Countering the British Columbia Referrals Process and Reclaiming Stó:lō Ways of Being on the Land
Final Report of the Honorable Jean-Jacques Croteau Retired Judge of the Superior Court Regarding the Allegations Concerning the Slaughter of Inuit Sled Dogs in Nunavik (1950-1970)
First Nation and Métis Consultation Policy Framework
First Nations Carbon Collaborative—Indigenous Peoples and Carbon Markets: An Annotated Bibliography
Forgotten and Ignored: Special Education in First Nations Schools in Canada
From Homeland to Oil Sands: The Impact of Oil and Gas Development on the Lubicon Cree of Canada
From Paintings to Power: The Meaning of the Warrior Flag Twenty Years After Oka
A Glimmer of Hope: A Review of Recent Works on the Relations between Indigenous Peoples and Settler Society
Grade 5: Teliaqewey, Kaqowey net Teliaqeweyminu? = Ah, the Truth. What Is Our Truth? = Wolamewakon. Keq Nit Kwolamewakonon?
Content focused on the Mi'kmaq, Wolastoqewiyik, and Passamaquoddy (Peskotomuhkati) peoples of New Brunswick.
Related materials: Interactive Activities; Activity Answer Sheet Lesson A: Worldview in Muin/Bear/Muwin and The Seven Hunters
History and Politics of the 'New Relationship'
History of Modern Aboriginal Law
History through a Native Lens
Timeline of significant events, government policies, and resistance movements in the United States from 3000 BC through to 2020.