"Legislating-Out" Sexual Discrimination: Native Women and Bill C-31
The Legislation of Identity: "I'll be Damned if I let These People Take my Family's Heritage Away With the Stroke of a Pen"
Legislative Efforts to Eliminate Native-Themed Mascots, Nicknames, and Logos: Slow but Steady Progress Post-APA Resolution
"A Lesson They Would Not Soon Forget": The Convicted Native Participants of the 1885 North-West Rebellion
Let Me Suggest
Liberalism and Community in a World of Difference: Justifying the Protection of Ethnocultural Minorities Within Liberal Democracy
Liberalism, Surveillance, and Resistance: Indigenous Communities in Western Canada, 1877-1927
Limited Roll Out of New ID Begins
Discusses distribution and delays of the new Secure Status Indian Cards to Buffalo Point First Nation.
Entire issue on one pdf. To access article scroll to p.10.
A Line in the Sand
Listen Up and Hear Us
Brief article on the protest of the Harmonized Sales Tax (HST) by the Batchawana First Nation.
Entire issue on one pdf. To access article scroll to p.5.
A Literature Review and Annotated Bibliography Focusing on Aspects of Aboriginal Child Welfare in Canada
Litigation Seen as Result of Loss of Old Native Ways
The Lived Experience of Discrimination: Aboriginal Women Who Are Federally Sentenced
"Living Well": The Indigenous Latin American Perspective
Locating Canada's Truth and Reconciliation Commission in Global Trends
Locked Out: Inmate Services and Conditions of Custody in Saskatchewan Correctional Centres
Mad Dogs and (Mostly) Englishmen: Colonial Relations, Commodities, and the Fate of Inuit Sled Dogs
Making First Nation Law: The Listuguj Mi’gmaq Fishery
Mana Tamariki: Cultural Alienation - Māori Child Homicide and Abuse
Mandatory Imprisonment of Property Offenders in the Northern Territory
Manitoba Metis Join Prairie Coalition to Pursue Land Rights
Manitoba Métis President David Chartrand awaits a Court of Queen's Bench decision that will include issues related to scrip, Métis land and harvesting rights.
Entire issue on one pdf. To access article scroll to p.8.
Maori Perspectives on Collaboration and Colonisation in Contemporary Aotearoa/New Zealand Child and Family Welfare Policies and Practices
Maori Retribalization and Treaty Rights to the New Zealand Fisheries
Mapping Indigenous Futures: Creating a Native Voice in Higher Education
The Marshall Decision as News: The Construction of a Stereotyped Noble Savage in Two Canadian Newspapers, The Miramichi Leader and The Globe and Mail
The Marshall Trilogy and the Constitutional Dehumanization of American Indians
The "Mascotting" of Native America: Construction, Commodity, and Assimilation
Massacre Myth
Maya USA: The Immigration Reform and Control Act of 1986 and Its Impact on Guatemalan Maya in the United States
McIvor: Justice Delayed-Again
McIvor V Canada and the 2010 Amendments to the Indian Act: A Half-Hearted Remedy to Historical Injustice
The McLean Report: Legitimizing Victoria's New Assimilationism
The Meaning of Subsection 35(1) of the Constitution Act, 1982: A Comment on Mitchell v. Minister of National Revenue
Meaningful Consultation and Participation in the Mining Sector? A Review of the Consultation and Participation of Indigenous Peoples within the International Mining Sector
Meaningful Consultation: Nation-to-Nation or Domination & Assimilation
Media Coverage of Organized Crime: Impact on Public Opinion?
Medical Malpractice Litigation - Who's In The Firing Line?
Memory of Atrocity in Canada: How Do You Engage Canadian Civil Society in Truth and Reconciliation?
Metis Harvesting Rights Upheld in Ontario Court
Comments on how the Metis successfully attained the right to hunt and fish for food in Ontario.
Entire issue on one pdf. To access article scroll to p.9.
Métis Law in Canada, 2010
Métis Offenders in British Columbia: An Examination of Needs in the Institution and Upon Release
Métis Rights and Land Claims: An Annotated Bibliography
Metis say Proof of Being is a Link to Riel: Identity Issue could be Settles by Courts
Métis Veterans Launch Class Action Lawsuit
Metis Veterans Ready for Battle
Contends that after World War II ended, Metis veterans have seen no federally funded compensation, unlike non-Aboriginal veterans, and are ready to deal with the issue at a political level.
Entire issue on one pdf. To access article scroll to p.5.