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Aboriginal Rights and Public Policy: Historical Overview and an Analysis of the Aboriginal Fisheries Strategy
America's Native Sweet: Chippewa Treaties and the Right to Harvest Maple Sugar
Arctic Adaptations: Native Whalers and Reindeer Herders of Northern Eurasia
Assu of Cape Mudge: Recollections of a Coastal Indian Chief
Athabasca Denesuliné Inquiry Into the Claim of the Fond du Lac, Black Lake, and Hatchet Lake First Nations
The Beothuk of Newfoundland: A Vanished People
The Birpai of the Manning River and Purfleet Station
Canada Fur Watch: Aboriginal Livelihood at Risk
Cannery Days: A Chapter in the Lives of the Heiltsuk
Carving is Healing to Me: An Interview With Manasie Akpaliapik
Chamakese vs. The Crown
Chipewyan Ethno-Adaptations: Identity Expression for Chipewyan Indians of Northern Saskatchewan
Citizens of Canada and of the Empire: The Archaeology and History of an Arctic Mission
CMT Archaeology in British Columbia: The Meares Island Studies
Co-operative Management of Local Fisheries: New Directions for Improved Management and Community Development
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.]
Decolonizing the Choctaw Nation: Choctaw Political Economy in the Twentieth Century
Diabetes, the Ice Free Corridor, and the Paleoindian Settlement of North America
Documents: Introduction
Introduction and two archival items on social and economic conditions of Aboriginal people. The first report is on the socio-economic conditions that contributed to the spread of tuberculosis, and the economic measures needed to be taken to improve the lives of the Swampy Cree Indians. The second report is an account of the socio-economic conditions of Aboriginal people and recommendations for improving their health status.