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The Alberta Dis-Advantage: Métis Issues and the Public Discourse in Wild Rose Country
Alberta's Métis Settlements Legislation: An Overview of Ownership and Management of Settlement Lands
Battle of Batoche Remembered 125 Years Later
Celebrating the Year of the Métis: Junior
A Compendium of Aboriginal Healing Foundation Research
Contours of a People: Metis Family, Mobility, and History
Contours of a People: Métis Family, Mobility, and History
Crisis at Red River
Dismantling the Patriarchal Altar From Within
The Exceptional-Typical History of a Métis Elder in Fort St. John
Exiled, Executed, Exalted: Louis Riel, Homo Sacer and the Production of Canadian Sovereignty
Final Report on Métis Education and Boarding School Literature and Sources Review
The Flemish Bastard and the Former Indians: Métis and Identity in Seventeenth-Century New York
Forgotten Métis
Forgotten: The Métis Residential School Experience
Forgotten: The Métis Residential School Experience: Workshop Guide
Fragmentation and Realignment: The Continuing Cycle of Métis and Non-Status Indian Political Organizations in Canada
Grade 8: Investigating Historical Significanace: A Métis Timeline
"Hero of the Half-Breed Rebellion": Gabriel Dumont and Late Victorian Military Masculinity
A History of the Legislative Assembly of Assiniboia / Le Conseil du Gouvernenment Provisoire
Icelandic Immigrants and First Nations People in Canada
[The Identities of Marie Rose Delorme Smith: Portrait of a Métis Woman, 1861-1960]
The Influence of the Hudson's Bay Company in the Exploration and Settlement of the Red River Valley of the North
Kaa-tipeyimishoyaahk - 'We Are Those Who Own Ourselves': A Political History of Métis Self-Determination in the North-West, 1830-1870
The Long Journey of a Forgotten People: Métis Identities and Family Histories
Louis Riel (1844-1885)
Louis Riel, Justice and Métis Self-Identification: Literary Politics for Survival in the Evolution of Canadian Nationhood
Louis Riel, Justice, and Métis Self-Identification: Literary Politics for Survival in the Evolution of Canadian Nationhood
English Thesis (PhD) -- University of London, 2014.
Manitoba Metis Federation
May Tea? : The Construction of Metis identity in 20th Century Penetanguishene and Ontario
Student Research Project (MA) -- Nipissing University, 2010.
Métis Dictionary of Biography: Volume B
Métis in Canada: History, Identity, Law and Politics
Métis in Canada: History, Identity, Law & Politics
Métis Law in Canada, 2010
"Métis": Race, Recognition, and the Struggle for Indigenous Peoplehood
Métis Remembrances of Education: Bridging History With Memory
Métis Self and Identity: The Search to Contribute a Verse
Integrated Studies Project (M.A.)--Athabasca University, 2010.
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Métis Veterans: Remembrances
Metis Voices / Metis Life
Personal narratives of Elders from Barrows, Cold Lake, Cranberry Portage, Crane River, Cross Lake, Duck Bay, Mallard, Manigotagan, Moose Lake, Norway House, Pelican Rapids, and Wabowden, communities located in Manitoba.
"My Life in Keg River" by Mary Percy Jackson
The Mystery of the Bell
Documentary looks into the disappearance and re-appearance of the 'The Bell of Batoche' which was proported to have been seized by soldiers during the North-West Resistance. Duration: 45:09.
Related Material: Teacher Resource Guide.
Pemmican Empire: Food, Trade, and the Last Bison Hunts in the North American Plains, 1760-1882
Place Among the Displaced: Envisioning Preservation of a Métis Settlement in Montana
Provisional Government of Assiniboia: Acknowledging the Contribution of Original North American Peoples to the Creation of Manitoba
Recalling Traditional Métis Christmas and New Year's Celebrations
Red River Resistance
Red River's Anglophone Community: The Conflicting Views of John Christian Schultz and Alexander Begg
Discusses how the two men's writings illustrate the two views points about the best option for Red River settlement's future: those who were in favour of annexation by Canada and those who felt that it would not be in the settlement's best interests since terms and conditions of it's future would be dictated by eastern Canadians.
Report by Lieut. William F. Butler (69th Regt.) of His Journey from Fort Garry to Rocky Mountain House and Back, During the Winter of 1870-71. to Hon. Adams G. Archibald Lieut. Gov. Manitoba, 10th March, 1871.
Excerpt from The Great Lone Land, originally published in 1873.