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Armed with an Eagle Feather against the Parliamentary Mace: A Discussion of Discourse on Indigenous Sovereignty and Spirituality in a Settler Colonial Canada, 1990-2017
BC First Peoples 12: Teacher Resource Guide
Bibliography on Indigenous Rights in Canada, 1995-2022
Exhaustive list (856 pages).
Building on Common Ground: A New Vision for Impact Assessment in Canada: The Final Report of the Expert Panel for the Review of Environmental Assessment Processes
Canada's Northern Communication Policies: The Role of Aboriginal Organizations
Canada's Northern Food Subsidy Nutrition North Canada: A Comprehensive Program Evaluation
Canadian Indigenous Place Name Legislation and Policies
Discusses entities currently responsible for official place names and their processes, and some of the practicalities which need to be addressed when reverting to the Indigenous names.
Collaborative Consent and British Columbia's Water: Towards Watershed Co-Governance
Dam Bennett: The Impacts of the W.A.C. Bennett Dam and Williston Lake Reservoir on the Tsek'ehne of Northern British Columbia
Ecological Relations and Indigenous Food Sovereignty in Standing Rock
Economic Recovery in Response to Worldwide Crises: Fiduciary Responsibility and the Legislative Consultative Process with Respect to Bill 150 (Green Energy and Green Economy Act, 2009) and Bill 197 (COVID-19 Economic Recovery Act, 2020) in Ontario, Canada
Discusses the consultation, or lack there of, between the Canadian government and its Indigenous populations in regards to green energy policies.
Factors That Support Indigenous Involvement in Multi-actor Environmental Stewardship
First Nations and Adaptive Water Governance in Southern Ontario, Canada
Food (In)Security: Food Policy and Vulnerability in Kugaaruk, Nunavut
Food Politics: Finding a Place for Country Food in Canada's Northern Food Policy
Food Security and Indigenous Mental Health
Fracking, First Nations and Water: Respecting Indigenous Rights and Better Protecting Our Shared Resources
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
Ice Blink: Navigating Northern Environmental History
Indigenous and Western Environmental Resource Management: A Learning Experience With the Laitu Khyeng Indigenous Community in the Chittagong Hill Tracts (CHT), Bangladesh
Indigenous Perspectives of Ecosystem-based Management and Co-governance in the Pacific Northwest: Lessons for Aotearoa
Indigenous World 2017
Mechanisms of Indigenous Exclusion in British Columbia's Environmental Assessment Process
Muslims, Navajos, and Peaches
Network Sovereignty: Building the Internet across Indian Country
A New Shared Arctic Leadership Model
Not Your Grandfather's Horse: Automobiles Performing the Trickster in Modern and Contemporary Work by Artists from Plains Cultures
Nutrition North Canada: Real Change is Yet to Come
[Operation Water Spirit Thematic Units]: Grade Nine: Introduction and Directions
Our National Competitiveness and Canada's Territories
Paddling Together: Co-Governance Models for Regional Cumulative Effects Management
Regional-scale Food Security Governance in Inuit Settlement Areas: Opportunities and Challenges in Northern Canada
Reports of the Auditor General of Canada to the Parliament of Canada: Independent Auditor's Report 8: Emergency Management in First Nations Communities—Indigenous Services Canada
“This Spurious Philanthropy”: Indian Policy, Food and Canada’s North-West As Discussed in the Senate of Canada in 1886
"The evidence provided to this commission provides an interesting record of thoughts by the government and (mostly non-Indigenous, male) experts about food, Indigenous people and the Canadian North-West ten years after the near-extinction of the buffalo."