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Aboriginal Food Security in Northern Canada: An Assessment of the State of Knowledge
Aboriginal Knowledge and Science Education Research Project
Aboriginal Youth & Media Conference at MOA (Part Two)
Analysis of the Rocky Boy Reservation's Border Formation 1885 to 1950
Arctic 2014: Who Gets a Voice and Why It Matters (Part 1)
Arctic 2014: Who Gets a Voice and Why It Matters (Part 2)
Arctic Energy Development and Best Practices on Consultation With Indigenous Peoples
Arctic Governance
Arctic Human Development Report: Regional Processes and Global Linkages: Volume II (2010-2014)
Beneath the Surface: Uncovering the Economic Potential of Ontario’s Ring of Fire
Bibliography of ‘Arctic Social Science’ Theses and Dissertations
A Blueprint for Watershed Governance in British Columbia
Canada's Relationship with Inuit from Contact to the Present: A Policy Overview
Canadian Governmental Policy and Inuit Food (In)security: Community Concerns from Baffin Island
Claiming Place in Wor(l)ds: Linda Hogan's Solar Storms
Dialogue, Displacement and Return-Contexts of a Journey on a Two-Way Road: Anishinaabek Responses to All-Weather Roads Through Waabanong Nakaygum: Memory and Continuity on the Eastern Shores of Lake Winnipeg and Beyond
Dinosaurs and Indians: Fossil Resource Dispossession of Sioux Lands, 1846-1875
Disaster Preparedness in Canada's North: What's Resilience Got to Do With It?
DNA Testing to Prove Indian Status Limited
Even with the amendments made to the Indian Act in 1985, complexities continue to surround Aboriginal people's attempts to regain their legal status.
Entire issue on one pdf. To access article scroll to p.9.
Do Governments Have a Duty to Consult First Nations About Proposed Legislative Amendments?
‘‘Each year the Indians flexed their muscles a little more’’: The Maliseet Defence of Aboriginal Fishing Rights on the St. John River, 1945–1990
Editorial: [Indigenous Affairs: Logging and Indigenous Peoples]
Environment, Development, Trust and Well-Being in the Tsawwassen First Nation
Environmental Governance Literature Review Report
Discusses three main categories: Aboriginal resource management, Aboriginal economic development, and Aboriginal governance, and looks at the roles Aboriginal people play in each.
Environmental Governance Literature Review Report: An Opinion Paper
Provides a literature review about Indigenous environmental governance in Canada based on publications from political science, natural resource management, ecology, native studies, and economic development literature.
Evenks of Chitinskaya Province: Society and Economy (Still) in Transition
Examining the Media’s Portrayal of Idle No More: A Critical Discourse Analysis
Expert Panel on Safe Drinking Water for First Nations: Volume II: Legal Analysis
First Mile Challenges to Last Mile Rhetoric: Exploring the Discourse between Remote and Rural First Nations and the Telecom Industry
First Nations Public Health: A Framework for Improving the Health of Our People and Our Communities
First Peoples Child & Family Review [Vol. 9 no. 2, 2014, Special Edition by Children and Youth]
Highlights submissions by children and youth including songs, poetry, drawings, and letters to the Prime Minister regarding inequities in child welfare, education, and health for First Nations children and youth.
First Peoples Law 2014
Food and Authority in the English Atlantic World, 1570-1640
Framing Redress After 9/11: Protest, Reconciliation and Canada's War on Terror Against Indigenous Peoples
From the First Mile to Outer Space: Tamaani Satellite Internet in Northern Quebec
Governance in the Arctic: Political Systems and Geopolitics
The Government of Canada and Lutsel K'e Dene First Nation Take Steps to Create a New National Park on East Arm of Great Slave Lake
Guidelines for Considering Traditional Knowledges in Climate Change Initiatives: Version 1.0 - September 2014
History & Culture eBook
Identity, Cultural Values, and American Indians' Perceptions of Science and Technology
Indigenous Customary Law and the Environment
Indigenous Environmental Laws: CIER Research Question
Indigenous Environmental Laws: First What Are Indigenous Environmental Laws?: An Opinion Paper
Discusses environmental laws and the norms and practices that Indigenous people follow in their relationship with other species and the environment.
Indigenous Environmental Laws: Purpose, Scope, Recognition, Interpretaion and Enforcement: An Opinion Paper Prepared for the Centre for Indigenous Environmental Resources (CIER)
Discusses various Indigenous environmental laws and looks at the governance of those laws.