Inuit Investment Strategies in Northern Development: The Case of the Makivik Corporation in Northern Quebec
John Emms Interview
Joint Management: A Look at the Early Record of the Porcupine Caribou Management Board
Jordan River Anderson: The Messenger
Lac La Croix: Rumor, Rhetoric and Reality in Indian Affairs
Lakota Efforts in the International Arena
Land Back: A Yellowhead Institute Red Paper
Land Claims [Part One]
Land Claims [Part Two]
Land of Opportunity: Anti-Black and Settler Logics in the Gentrification of Detroit
The Land Since Time Immemorial: A Review of the Assimilation Policies on Indigenous Peoples Through Canada's Indian Act
Law's Indigenous Ethics
A Legal Analysis of Genocide: Supplementary Report of the National Inquiry into Missing and Murdered Indigenous Women and Girls
Limits of Legal Action: The Cherokee Cases
Linking the Indigenous Sami People with Regional Development in Sweden
Liora Salter Interview
Local Values in Governance: Legacy of Choho in Forest and School Management in a Tamang Community in Nepal
A Long Wait for Change: Independent Review of Child Protection Services to Inuit Children in Newfoundland and Labrador
Lubicon Indian Protest Hits Saskatchewan
Lubicon Land Claim Talks Back on Track
The Lummi Indians and the Canadian/American Pacific Salmon Treaty
Making a Treaty: The North American Experience
The Making of a “Peaceable Kingdom”: Land, Peopling and Progress in an Expanding Canada
Māori with Lived Experience of Disability, Part I
The Metis
The Métis as a Factor in the Euro-Canadian Development of the Canadian West
Argues that the Métis were not an impediment to Euro-Canadian development and that their fight to be recognized as a "New Nation" played a significant role in the creation of Manitoba, Saskatchewan and Alberta.
Métis Land: Rights and Scrip Conference: Welcoming Remarks and Keynote Presentation
Métis Politics and Governance in Canada
The Mystery Man of Sand Creek: George Laird Shoup
A Narrow Vision: Duncan Campbell Scott and the Administration of Indian Affairs in Canada
Native Narratives: The Representation of Native Americans in Public Broadcasting
Looks at radio and television coverage of key events or issues in both non-Native American-produced and Native American-created programs found in the American Archive of Public Broadcasting collection. Divided into five sections: (Mis)Representations of Native Americans; Termination, Relocation, and Restoration; The American Indian Movement; Native Americans in Contemporary News Media; and Visual Sovereignty: Native-Created Public Media.
Native People and Hydroelectric Development in Northern Manitoba, 1957-1987: The Promise and the Reality
[New Approaches to First Nation Infrastructure Development: The Nipissing First Nation Experience]
New Bearings on Northern Scholarship
Northern Communities: The Prospects for Empowerment
Not One More: Addressing the Data Crisis of Missing and Murdered Indigenous Women and Girls in Urban Areas
Nurturing the Seeds of Indigenous Early Learning and Child Care in Canada
The Obligation to Set Aside and Secure Lands for the "Half-Breed" Population Pursuant to Section 31 of the Manitoba Act, 1870
The Ojibwa: 1640-1840: Two Centuries of Change from Sault Ste. Marie to Coldwater-Narrows
Our Sacred Land: Indigenous Peoples' Community Land Use Planning Handbook in BC
Our Stories: First Peoples in Canada
Our Stories: First Peoples in Canada
Outsourcing Reconciliation: The Government of Canada's #IndigenousReads Campaign and the Appropriation of Indigenous Intellectual Labor
Pathways in a Forest: Indigenous Guidance on Prevention-Based Child Welfare
Pathways in a Forest: Indigenous Guidance on Prevention-Based Child Welfare
Perspective: A Haunting Spectre No More: The Canadian Indigenous Condition
Argues that the Canadian Indigenous condition is not related to colonialism rather it is based on an European socioeconomic structure.