[Closing the Gap: The Hon[ourable] Kevin Rudd]
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.]
Collaborative Consent and British Columbia's Water: Towards Watershed Co-Governance
The Colonial Legacy: The Legal Oppression of Indigenous Women and Girls in Canada
Coming Together, Making Progress: Business's Role in Reconciliation with Indigenous Peoples
Commentary
Common Law Aboriginal Title
La communauté comme sujet et objet du droit: implications
pour les Métis du Canada = The Law of the Community and Community Rights: Implications for the Métis in Canada
Communicating Effectively with Indigenous Clients: An Aboriginal Legal Services Publication
Complicating the Ideology of Motherhood: Child Welfare Law and First Nation Women
Considerations for Achieving "Aboriginal Justice" in Canada
The Constitutional Status and Rights of the Métis People in Canada
Constitutionalising the Patriarchy: Aboriginal Women and Aboriginal Government
The Contemporary Coast Salish: Essays by Bruce Granville Miller
The Contextual Nature of American Indian Criminality
A Contract Relating to the Implementation of the Nunavut Final Agreement
Controlling Land: Historical Representations of News Discourse in British Columbia
Cost of Doing Nothing: Missing and Murdered Indigenous Women and Girls
The Cost of Not Successfully Implementing Article 23: Representative Employment for Inuit within the Government
Country Study--New Zealand Indigenous Governance Substantive Paper Document (2)
Court of Appeal Holds Duty to Consult Does Not Apply to Statutory Interpretation
Creating Nunavut and Breaking the Mold of the Past
Cultural Property
Culture as Catalyst: Preventing the Criminalization of Indigenous Youth
Custodians of the Past: Archaeology and Indigenous Best Practices in Canada
[Daniels in Context]
Daniels Through the Lens of the UN Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples
Daniels v Canada (Indian Affairs and Northern Development)
Daniels v. Canada: Origins, Intentions, Futures
Dealing with the “Community Conundrum”: Métis Responses to the Application of R v Powley in British Columbia—Litigation, Negotiation, and Practice
A Death Feast in Dimla-Hamid
Debating Cultural Appropriation
Lesson plan focuses on what cultural appropriation is, how it affects Indigenous peoples and whether it should be regulated by law.
Accompanying Material: Student Version.
Developed in conjunction with the documentary Rumble: The Indians Who Rocked the World.