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Are We Really Sorry? Some Reflections on Canadian Indigenous Policies in the Early Twenty-First Century
Looks at the First Nations Governance Act, the Ipperwash Inquiry and final report, Caledonia and specific claims policies, and the Kelowna Accord. Chapter from A History of Treaties and Policies edited by Jerry P. White, Erik Anderson, Jean-Pierre Morin, and Dan Beavon, which is vol. 7 in the Aboriginal Policy Research series. Originally presented at the third annual Aboriginal Policy Research Conference, 2009.
Arizona Criminalizes Indigenous Knowledge
Assembly of First Nations Report to the United Nations Special Rapporteur on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples
Assimilation Through Accommodation: Practice, Rhetoric and Decisions in the Territorial Court of the Northwest Territories, 1955-1972
At the Woods Edge: Reconciling with Native America
ATSIC: Guide to Your Commission
An Award for a Fearless Woman: 2013 Ellen L. Lutz Indigenous Rights Award
An Awkward Silence: Missing and Murdered Vulnerable Women and the Canadian Justice System
Backgrounder: Aboriginal Offenders - A Critical Situation
The 'Bare Life': Disposable Bodies, Race and Femicide in the Trial Coverage of Vancouver's Murdered 'Missing' Women?
Before Truth: Memory, History and Nation in the Context of Truth and Reconciliation in Canada
Being Idle No More: The Women Behind the Movement
Benefit Agreements in Canada's North: Priority Project on Sustainable Resource Development
[Beyond Blood: Rethinking Indigenous Identity]
Beyond Blood: Rethinking Indigenous Identity
Beyond Blood: Rethinking Indigenous Identity by Pamela Palmater
Beyond Physical: Social Dimensions of the Water Crisis on Canada's First Nations and Considerations for Governance
Beyond the Duty to Consult: Comparing Environmental Justice in Three Aboriginal Communities in Canada
Beyond the Indian Act: Restoring Aboriginal Property Rights
Beyond the Three R's: Troubling Reconciliation, Restitution, & Resurgence: A Conversation for Aboriginal and Non-Aboriginal Educators
Bibliography of British Columbia
Bill C-27: An Act to enhance the financial accountability and transparency of First Nations
Bill C-27: Draconian, or a Law Without Teeth?
Comments on the First Nations Financial Transparency Act and questions whether it is legal or not.
Entire issue on one pdf. To access article scroll to p.25.
Bill C-27: First Nations Financial Transparency Act
Bill C-31: A Study of Cultural Trauma
Applies three processes: trauma to culture, collective stigmatization, and historic trauma. Chapter three from Moving Forward, Making a Difference, vol. 3, which is also vol. 5 in the Aboriginal Policy Research series. Originally presented at the second annual Aboriginal Policy Research Conference, 2006.
Bill C-9: An Act respecting the election and term of office of chiefs and councilors of certain First Nations and the composition of council of those First Nations
Bill Receives Assent, But Chiefs Will Have Last Word
Looks at Bill C-45, and the frustrations that led to the resulting scuffle as well as the 'Idle No More' campaign.
Entire issue on one pdf. To access article scroll to p.20.
Bioethicists Call for Investigation into Nutritional Experiments on Aboriginal People
Blackgin's Leap: A Window into Aboriginal-European Relations in the Pioneer Valley, Queensland in the 1860s
Board Spotlight: Driving Dialogue and Reconnection in Indian Country -- Lesley Kabotie
Book Review: Racialized Policing: Aboriginal People's Encounters With the Police
Boundaries of the Reservation: Social, Political and Geographical Considerations for Defining the Limits of the Keweenaw Bay Chippewa Reservation
Breaking the Silence on Violence Against Indigenous Girls, Adolescents and Young Women: A Call to Action Based on an Overview of Existing Evidence from Africa, Asia Pacific and Latin America
A Brief History of Federal Inuit Policy Development: Lessons in Consultation and Cultural Competence
Bringing Them in Alive: Selective Service and Native Americans
Broader Lessons to be Learned
Brown Book: Māori in Screen Production
'Building Alternatives to the Colonial Relationship'
Brief interview with a University of British Columbia professor regarding the Idle No More movement and the direction it will be taking.
Entire issue on one pdf. To access article scroll to p.17.