Housing Strategies That Improve Indigenous Health Outcomes
How Did We Get Here?: A Concise, Unvarnished Account of the History of the Relationship between Indigenous Peoples and Canada
How Grandma Kate Lost Her Cherokee Blood and What This Says about Race, Blood, and Belonging in Indian Country
How Has Inuit Qaujimajatuqangit Been Considered? A Student Reflects on the 2018 ArcticNet Annual Scientific Meeting
[Humanizing Security in the Arctic]
'I hope you will be my frend': Tasmanian Aborigines in the Furneaux Group in the Nineteenth Century: Population and Land Tenure
Identifying Challenges and Opportunities for Residents in Upernavik as Oil Companies are Making a First Entrance in to Baffin Bay
Identity-Based Appeals: Explaining Changing Strategies of the Indigenous Movement in Bolivia
Idle No More
The "Idle No More" Movement: Paradoxes of First Nations Inclusion in the Canadian Context
Idle No More Movement Seeks to Educate Canadians With Teach-ins and Panel Discussions
Comments on the protest rallies against omnibus Bills C-38 and C-45.
Entire issue on one pdf. To access article scroll to p.15.
Idle No More: Protest to Change?: A Grassroots Movement
Idling in the Fast Lane of a Unique Winter
Comments on the Idle No More movement started by four Saskatchewan women to protest Prime Minister Stephen Harper's omnibus bills.
Entire issue on one pdf. To access article scroll to p.12.
"If This Great Nation May Be Saved?" The Discourse of Civilization in Cherokee Indian Removal
The Impact of Australian Policy Regimes on Indigenous Population Movement: Evidence from the 2001 Census
Provides statistics on population distribution, propensity to move by age, sex, and remoteness of community, and migration to more accessible regions.
Chapter fifteen from Moving Forward, Making a Difference, vol. 1, which is also vol. 3 in the Aboriginal Policy Research series.
Originally presented at the second annual Aboriginal Policy Research Conference, 2006.
The Impact of 'Doomed Race' Assumptions in the Administration of Queensland's Indigenous Population by the Chief Protectors of Aboriginals from 1897 to 1942
Imperial Literacy and Indigenous Rights: Tracing Transoceanic Circuits of a Modern Discourse
Implementation Evaluation of the Nutrition North Canada Program: Final Report
Implementation of Jordan's Principle: Understanding and Addressing Disparities in Health and Social Services for Status First Nations Children Living On-Reserve
Implementing the Duty to Consult: Towards a Pan-Canadian Regime of Aboriginal Consultation?
Implementing the Settlement Agreement
Improving Access to Indigenous Medicine for Patients in Hospital-based Settings: A Challenge for Health Systems in Northern Canada
Improving the Quality of Indigenous Health Information
Improving the State of Health Hardware in Australian Indigenous Housing: Building More Houses is Not the Only Answer
In Brief: Idle No More
In From the Margins, Part II: Reducing Barriers to Social Inclusion and Social Cohesion
In Praise of Taxes: The Link between Taxation and Good Governance in a First Nations Context
In the Absence of Justice: Aboriginal Case Law and the Ethnocentrism of the Courts
In Whose Interest?: Government-Indian Relations in Northern Saskatchewan and Wisconsin, 1900-1940
Indexes of Western First Nations Bands: Languages, Agencies, Inspectorates, and Regional Offices
Indian Agents and the "Indian Problem" in 1946: Reconsidering the Theory of Coercive Tutelage
Indian Justice: Our Vision
Indian Literacy, U. S. Colonialism, and Literary Criticism
Indian Metropolis: Native Americans in Chicago, 1945-1965
Indian Presence with No Indians Present: NAGPRA and Its Discontents
The Indian Removal Debate and Rise of Partisan Identity in the Age of Jackson
Indian Resilience and Rebuilding: Indigenous Nations in the Modern American West
Indian Rights for Indian Babies: Canada's "Unstated Paternity" Policy
Indian Status, Band Membership, First Nation Citizenship, Kinship, Gender, and Race: Reconsidering the Role of Federal Law
Discusses how legislation such as the Indian Act, with its arbitrary rules about who is considered to be an "Indian", has impacted relationships and identity in Aboriginal communities. Chapter seven from Moving Forward, Making a Difference, vol. 3, which is also vol. 5 in the Aboriginal Policy Research series. Originally presented at the second annual Aboriginal Policy Research Conference, 2006.
Indian Studies 221.3: Introduction to Métis History
Indian Women, Domesticity, and Liberal State Formation: The Gendered Dimension of Indian Policy Reform During the Assimilation and Allotment Eras
Indigenous Activism, Community Sustainability, and the Constraints of CANZUS Settler-Colonial Nationhood.
Indigenous Broadband Policy Advocacy in Canada's Far North
Discusses the history of Indigenous engagement with media and telecommunication policy and looks at how a consortium composed of academic researchers and First Nations technology organizations used hearings held by the Canadian Radio-television and Telecommunications Commission (CRTC) to bring three issues to the forefront: open access to transport networks; subsidy support for First Nations community networks; and the need for consultation with Indigenous communities about infrastructure development and service upgrades taking place in their territories.
Indigenous Child Welfare Legislation: A Historical Change or Another Paper Tiger?
Reviews 2018 Indigenous child welfare legislation to address the welfare of Indigenous children and families.