Questions about Questions: Law and Film Reflections on the Duty to Learn
Questions Need to be Answered, Says Family Member of Pickton's Last Victim
Reflects on the life and personality of Mona Wilson, a victim of serial killer Robert Pickton, and the naming of a corporation after Wilson's First Nation's name, Running Bear.
Entire issue on one pdf. To access article scroll to p.8.
Racial Oppression in Sherman Alexie's Reservation Blues
Racialization of Poverty: Indigenous Women, the Indian Act and Systemic Oppression: Reasons for Resistance
Rape Cases on Indian Lands Go Uninvestigated
Rare Written Record of Treaty 4 Signing Finally Returns to Pasqua First Nation
Re-imagining Ethics, Rethinking Rights, and Canadian Adaptations of Shakespeare: Daniel David Moses's Brébeuf's Ghost and the Specters of the Human
Re-membering Cherokee Justice in Ruth Muskrat Bronson's "The Serpent"
Rebecca Belmore: Vigil and the Named and the Unnamed, 2002
Reclaiming Our Way of Being: Matrimonial Real Property Solutions Position Paper
The Recognition of Indigenous People's Rights in the Context of Area Protection and Management in the Arctic
Recognizing Aboriginal Title: The Mabo Case and Indigenous Resistance to English-Settler Colonialism
Recommendations for Decolonizing British Columbia’s Heritage-Related Processes and Legislation
Study consisted of reviewing province's Heritage Branch policies, programs, guidelines and laws, research on the handling of Indigenous cultural heritage in other juristictions and development of a set of recommendations.
Reconciliation and Third-Party Interests: Tsilhqot’in Nation v. British Columbia
Reconciliation with Indigenous Women: Changing the Story of Missing and Murdered Indigenous Women and Girls
Reconciling Differences: The Triumphs are Spectacular, But Few
Comments on the twentieth anniversary of the Oka Crisis and the healing and reconciliation done by the sister of slain police officer Corporal Marcel Lemay.
Entire issue on one pdf. To access article scroll to p.12.
Reconstructing Tsimshian Culture and History Using Oral Traditions: A Brief Assessment of Two Expert Opinions
The Rediscovered Self: Indigenous Identity and Cultural Justice
Reduce Transaction Costs? Yes. Strengthen Property Rights? Maybe: The First Nations Land Management Act and Economic Development on Canadian Indian Reserves
Reducing Missing and Murdered Indigenous Women and Girls: Arizona's Statewide Study in Partnership with the HB2570 Legislative Committee
Reflections on Indigenous History and Memory: Reconstructing and Reconsidering Contact
Reframing the Issues: Emerging Questions for Métis, Non-Status Indian and Urban Aboriginal Policy Research: Workshop Summary Report
Information on a workshop that explored the issues raised by current scholarly research; provides a general sense of the issues relevant to Aboriginal peoples.
Renewing the Land Reform
Reparations for Cultural Loss to Survivors of Indian Residential Schools
Reparations for Historical Injustice: Can Cultural Appropriation as a Result of Residential Schools Provide Justification for Aboriginal Cultural Rights?
Reparations: Putting The Past to Rights
Repatriation, Digital Technology, and Culture in a Northern Athapaskan Community
Repatriation of Indigenous Knowledge and Intellectual Property to East Greenland
Repertoires for Supporting Sovereignty: The Protocols for Native American Archival Materials and Dance Information in Vancouver
Report by Lieut. William F. Butler (69th Regt.) of His Journey from Fort Garry to Rocky Mountain House and Back, During the Winter of 1870-71. to Hon. Adams G. Archibald Lieut. Gov. Manitoba, 10th March, 1871.
Excerpt from The Great Lone Land, originally published in 1873.