Search
Aboriginal Gillnet Fishers, Science, and the State: Salmon Fisheries Management on the Nass and Skeena Rivers, British Columbia, 1951-1961
[Aboriginal Title and Provincial Regulation: The Impact of Tsilhqot'in Nation v BC]
Adapting to a World of Change: Inuit Perspectives of Environmental Changes in Igloolik, Nunavut
Adapting to the Effects of Climate Change on Inuit Health
The Alberta Dis-Advantage: Métis Issues and the Public Discourse in Wild Rose Country
Aleut Identities: Tradition and Modernity in an Indigenous Fishery
America's Native Sweet: Chippewa Treaties and the Right to Harvest Maple Sugar
Ancient Pathways, Ancestral Knowledge: Ethnobotany and Ecological Wisdom of Indigenous Peoples of Northwestern North America
L'Anse Aux Meadows (EjAv-01): An Archaeological and Ethnohistorical Investigation of Bird Use During the Recent Indian Period in Newfoundland and Labrador
Arctic Indigenous Youth Resilience and Vulnerability: Comparative Analysis of Adolescent Experiences Across Five Circumpolar Communities
Arctic Social Indicators
Assu of Cape Mudge: Recollections of a Coastal Indian Chief
"Being Responsible, Respectful, Trying to Keep the Tradition Alive:" Cultural Resilience and Growing Up in an Alaska Native Community
The Beothuk of Newfoundland: A Vanished People
Biocultural Diversity and Indigenous Ways of Knowing: Human Ecology in the Arctic
The Birpai of the Manning River and Purfleet Station
Buffalo Past and Present
Uses the Madison Buffalo Jump State Park as a starting point to discuss the buffalo's importance in the economies, cosmologies, social organization, and spiritual life of Indigenous peoples of the plains. Recommended for use with Grade 9-12 students.
Canada’s North: What’s the Plan?
Canadian Aboriginal Concerns With Oil Sands: A Compilation of Key Issues, Resolutions and Legal Activities
Caribou Leadership: A Study of Traditional Knowledge, Animal Behavior, and Policy
Case Comment: R. v. Kapp: A Case of Unfulfilled Potential
Chinookan Peoples of the Lower Columbia
Chipewyan Ethno-Adaptations: Identity Expression for Chipewyan Indians of Northern Saskatchewan
Climate Change, Oil and Gas Development, and Inupiat Whaling in Northwest Alaska
Co-operative Management of Local Fisheries: New Directions for Improved Management and Community Development
Collaboration Between Aboriginal Peoples and the Canadian Forestry Industry: A Dynamic Relationship: A State of Knowledge Report
The Colonization of Mi'kmaw Memory and History, 1794-1928: The King v. Gabriel Sylliboy
Come On Ogzruk Let Me Win: Experience, Relationality, and Knowing in Kigiqtaamiut Hunting and Ethnography
A Comment on Zedeño et al.
Community Perspectives on Bioeconomic Development: Eco-Cultural Tourism in Hartley Bay, British Columbia
Conservation Value of the North American Boreal Forest from an Ethnobotanical Perspective
Considering Perspectives and Supporting Opinions: Balancing Competing Needs in Canada [Unit 1]
Uses the book The Inuit Thought of It: Amazing Arctic Innovations, by Alootook Ipellie with David MacDonald as a starting point to teach about how the Inuit have used the natural resources available to meet the needs of their communities. For use with students in Grade 5.
Contours of a People: Metis Family, Mobility, and History
Critical Success Factors in the First Nations Fishery of Atlantic Canada: Mi’kmaq and Maliseet Perceptions
Current Developments in Arctic Law, vol. 2, 2014
Customary Law and Conflict Resolution Among Kenya's Pastoralist Communities
Daily Life of the Inuit
Dark Emu, Black Seeds: Agriculture or Accident
Defining Aboriginal Identity: What the Courts Have Stated
Defining Food Security for Urban Aboriginal People: Final Report
DFO Makes the Worst of a Good Situation
Discusses the problems caused by the Department of Fisheries and Oceans incorrectly estimating several fish runs.
Entire issue on one pdf. To access article scroll to p.5.
Diabetes, the Ice Free Corridor, and the Paleoindian Settlement of North America
Dialogue, Displacement and Return-Contexts of a Journey on a Two-Way Road: Anishinaabek Responses to All-Weather Roads Through Waabanong Nakaygum: Memory and Continuity on the Eastern Shores of Lake Winnipeg and Beyond
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.