Search
[Truth and Reconciliation in Canada: If It Feels Good, It's Not Reconciliation]
Turning a Blind Eye? The Scope of the Charter Right to a Representative Jury
Turning Pages: Harold R. Johnson on Peace and Good Order
Writer, activist and former lawyer discusses his book, Peace and Good Order, the effects of incarceration on Indigenous communities, and the way that jailhouse culture fills the cultural void left by residential schools. Duration: 28:08
The Turtle Lodge: Sustainable Self-Determination in Practice
Two Maya Tales from the Mérida Cereso
Two Spirit Indigenous Offenders in the Correctional Service of Canada: Cultural Reclamation and Need for a Healing Approach to Policies and Programs
Ugliness as Colonial Violence: Mediations of Murdered and Missing Indigenous Women
Unable to Hear: Settler Ignorance and the Canadian Truth and Reconciliation Commission
Understanding Police-Indigenous Relations in Remote and Rural Australia: Police Perspectives
Understanding the Ways Missing and Murdered Indigenous Women are Framed and Handled by Social Media Users
United by the Problem, Divided by the Solution: How the Issue of Indigenous Women in Prostitution Was Represented at the Deliberations on Canada’s Bill C-36
The Urban Indigenous Health Research Gathering: A Report Documenting a Gathering Hosted In Winnipeg, Manitoba on Urban Indigenous Research Engagement
The Urgent Need to Reform Jury Selection after the Gerald Stanley and Colton Boushie Case
Utilization of the Indians of British Columbia
VAW Legal Information Resource: Supporting Aboriginal Women Facing Violence
VAWA Reauthorization of 2013 and the Continued Legacy of Violence Against Indigenous Women: A Critical Outsider Jurisprudence Perspective
Victory through Honour: Reconciling Canadian Intellectual Property Laws and Kwakwaka’wakw Cultural Property Laws
Violence Against Indigenous Women in Canada: A Colonial Legacy or Tragedy?
Violence and Abuse in Sámi Communities
Analyzes the State's human rights obligations as found in the European Convention on Human Human Rights, the UN Convention on the Elimination of All Forms of Discrimination against Women, the Istanbul Convention, and the UN Convention on the Rights of the Child and examines the challenges that prevent Sámi victims from accessing support services and the measures implemented to provide remedies to the problem.
Violence, Compensation, and Settler Colonialism: Adjudicating Claims of Indian Residential School Abuse through the Independent Assessment Process
Walking Together: Ontario's Long-Term Strategy to End Violence against Indigenous Women: Year Two Update--March 2018
Walking with Our Sisters: Healing through Storytelling
We All Belong: Indigenous Laws for Making and Maintaining Relations Against the Sovereignty of the State
Law Thesis (DJS) -- University of Toronto, 2018.
We Are All Treaty People
Special themed issue of Canada's History's children's magazine Kayak (September 2018). Suitable for ages 7-12.
We Are More Than Missing and Murdered: The Healing Power of Re-writing, Re-claiming and Re-presenting
“We’re not going to sit idly by:” 45 Years of Asserting Native Sovereignty along the Missouri River in Nebraska
We Rise Together: Achieving Pathway to Canada Target 1 through the Creation of Indigenous Protected and Conserved Areas in the Spirit and Practice of Reconciliation: The Indigenous Circle of Experts' Report and Recommendations
'We've Been Here for 2,000 Years': White Settlers, Native American DNA and the Phenomenon of Indigenization
The Wetiko Legal Principles: Cree and Anishinabek Responses to Violence and Victimization
What Can We Learn from the Stanley Trial?
What Ma Lach’s Bones Tell Us: Performances of Relational Materiality in Response to Genocide
What Strikes a Chord?: The Construction of Resonance in Collective Action Frames on Missing and Murdered Indigenous Women and Girls in Canada
"Wheeler, Arthur O."
When Disinformation Turns Deadly: The Case of Missing and Murdered Indigenous Women and Girls in Canadian Media
When Do Ideas of an Arctic Treaty Become Prominent in Arctic Governance Debates?
When is Indigeneity: Closing a Legal and Sociocultural Gap in a Contested Domestic/International Term
White Backlash against Indigenous Peoples in Canada
White Lies, Native Revisions: The Legacy of Violence in the American West
Who Is a Status Indian?
Who Lies Buried in Satanta’s Tomb? Co-memorating a Kiowa Warrior
Whose Water Is It Anyway? Indigenous Water Sovereignty in Canada: An Indigenous Resurgence Analysis of the Case of Halalt First Nation v British Columbia
Wildlife Management in Nunavik: Structures, Operations, and Perceptions Following the James Bay and Northern Quebec Agreement
Witnessing the Unspoken Truth: On Residential School Survivors' Testimonies in Canada
Work 2 Give: Fostering Collective Citizenship through Artistic and Healing Spaces for Indigenous Inmates and Communities in British Columbia
Working Together: Indigenous Recruitment and Retention in Remote Canada
Writing the History of Riel's People
Writing Water, Writing Life: Silko as Environmental Activist
“You Need to Go Beyond Creating a Policy”: Opportunities for Zones of Sovereignty in Native American History Instruction Policies in Arizona
Examines the 2004 legislation that required Indigenous history for K-12 curriculum and what it can mean for self-determination and sovereignty.
Pagination
- First page
- Previous page
- …
- 2
- 3
- 4
- 5
- 6
- 7
- 8
- 9
- 10