Indigenous Peoples' Nutrition Transition in a Right to Food Perspective
Indigenous Research, Publishing, and Intellectual Property
Indigenous Self-Determination and the State
Indigenous Social Work Around the World: Towards Culturally Relevant Education and Practice
The Indigenous World 2008
Insidious Idolatry: Canada's Aboriginal Leaders and the Legal Whiplash
"Inspector Dickens Journal" Fort Pitt, 1885.
Historical note:
An Institutional Suicide Machine: Discrimination Against Federally Sentenced Aboriginal Women in Canada
Intellectual Property and Aboriginal Peoples: Conflict or Compromise?
Discusses rights to traditional culture including skills, arts, beliefs, and knowledge of the environment and makes suggestions on approaches to the property debate.
Related Material: Fact Sheet.
Intellectual Property Issues in Archaeological Publication: Some Questions to Consider
Interior of Fort Pitt, Just [Before] the Rebellion of 1885
International Comparison of Indigenous Policing Models
International Human Rights Standards and Instruments Relevant to Indigenous Women
International Law and Indigenous Knowledge: Intellectual Property, Plant Biodiversity, and Traditional Medicine
Intertribal Integration: The Ethnological Argument in Duro v. Reina
Introduction to Documents Two and Three
Introduction and two archival items discuss the employment of Aboriginals in the agricultural sector. The first deals with the Dept. of Indian Affairs efforts to recruit them as migrant farm workers. The second discusses the exclusion of farm workers from protection under labour laws. Taken from the 1966 National Agricultural Manpower Committee Meeting.
Inuit, Museum and Repatriation: One Bone at One Time
Invisible Indians: Native Americans in Pennsylvania
The Ipperwash Inquiry and the Tragic Death of Dudley George
Is This Apartheid?: Aboriginal Reserves and Self-Government in Canada, 1960-1982
IWGIA, IWGIA-Moscow and RAIPON
IWGIA's Work in Africa and, Particularly, in Kenya
IWGIA's Work on the Concept of Indigenous Peoples in Asia
The James Bay And Northern Quebec Agreement
And The Northeastern Quebec Agreement
James Miles Venne
Brief profile of James Miles Venne, Lac La Ronge Indian Band chief, who helped create Kitsaki Development Corporation, set up band control of the local education system and lobbied for Aboriginal and treaty rights to be included in the Canadian Constitution.
Entire issue on one pdf. To access article scroll to p.26.