A Breach of Trust: An Investigation Into Foster Home Overcrowding in the Saskatoon Service Centre
Bringing Home Methylmercury: The Construction of an Authoritative Object of Knowledge for a Cree Community in Northern Quebec
The British Columbia Treaty Process: An Evolving Institution
Broken Treaties: United States and Canadian Relations with the Lakotas and the Plains Cree, 1868-1885
"But What Is The Object of Educating These Children, If It Costs Their Lives to Educate Them?": Federal Indian Education Policy in Western Canada in The Late 1800s
CAEPR Working Papers
Canada, British Columbia, and the Development of Indian Reserve No. 2, at Chuchuwayha
Canada Fur Watch: Aboriginal Livelihood at Risk
Canada Must Change Stance on Climate Change
Canada Must Reclaim Its Moral Leadership
Canada's First Nations People: Ethnicity and Leadership
Canada's Response to the On-Reserve Housing Crisis: A Study of the Kelowna Accord
Canada's Strategy: Our North, Our Heritage, Our Future
Canada's Truth and Reconciliation Commission for Indian Residential Schools: Whose Truth? Whose Reconciliation?
The Canadian Response to Aboriginal Residential Schools: Lessons for Australia and the United States?
A Case Study of Successful Project Management in Two Indigenous Communities
Cast All Imaginations: Umbi Speak
Challenging Old Ideas: Manitoba's Partnered Approach to Social Policy and Governance
The Champagne and Aishihik First Nations Self-Government Agreement
Changes Come to the Canadian Prairies
Focuses on the numbered treaties and their effect on First Nations and the Métis, and the causes and impacts of the North-West Resistance. Intended for Grade 10 Social Studies students.
Chapter from Horizons: Canada's Emerging Identity, 2nd Edition, by Michael Cranny.
Chief Benedict of Boothroyd and the Department of Indian Affairs
Child Welfare Services in Canada: Aboriginal & Mainstream
Church Stresses Healing
Claiming the City: Co-operation and Making the Deal in Urban Comprehensive Land Claims Negotiations in Canada
Clash of Cultures: Uprising at Akwesasne
Closing the Accountability Gap: The First Step Towards Better Indigenous Health
Cold Lake First Nation, Primrose Lake Air Weapons Range Inquiry, Public Release
FILES CAN ONLY BE ACCESSED USING FIREFOX BROWSER. Consists of minutes, transcripts, statements, correspondence/letters, submissions, and reports regarding the historical claim grievances of two First Nations who had 4,500 square miles of land seized to create the weapons range. Commissioners include: Harry S. LaForme, Daniel J. Bellegarde, and P.E. James Prentice. [These files were created and compiled by the ICC and provided to the Indigenous Studies Portal in 2009 to make widely available in online format.]