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Being Idle No More: The Women Behind the Movement
Beyond Blood: Rethinking Indigenous Identity by Pamela Palmater
Bill S-3: Addressing Sex Based Inequities in Indian Registration
Bill S-3: An Act to amend the Indian Act (elimination of sex-based inequities in registration)
Bill S-3, An Act to amend the Indian Act (elimination of sex-based Inequities in registration)
Bill S-3, An Act to amend the Indian Act (elimination of sex-based inequities in registration): Proposed Legislative Amendments
Confronting Megaprojects: Development Without Our Consent is not Development
Constitute!
Equal Status for Women in the Indian Act: The Indian Act and Bill S-3
Evidence - Special Committee on Violence against Indigenous Women: Thursday, May 2, 2013
Evidence - Special Committee on Violence against Indigenous Women: Thursday, May 30, 2013
Gender in Research on Northern Resource Development (Draft)
A History of Marginalisation: Maori Women
"I Am Not a Women's Libber Although Sometimes I Sound Like One": Indigenous Feminism and Politicized Motherhood
Idling in the Fast Lane of a Unique Winter
Comments on the Idle No More movement started by four Saskatchewan women to protest Prime Minister Stephen Harper's omnibus bills.
Entire issue on one pdf. To access article scroll to p.12.
Indian Status, Band Membership, First Nation Citizenship, Kinship, Gender, and Race: Reconsidering the Role of Federal Law
Discusses how legislation such as the Indian Act, with its arbitrary rules about who is considered to be an "Indian", has impacted relationships and identity in Aboriginal communities. Chapter seven 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.
Indigenous Women and Prostitution
Indigenous Women's Writing and the Cultural Study of Law
Indigenous World 2017
Initial Brief of the Grand Council of the Crees (Eeyou Istchee) / Cree Nation Government to the Public Inquiry Commission on Relations between Indigenous Peoples and Certain Public Services in Quebec: Listening, Reconciliation and Progress
Manufacturing Ideologies of the “Bad” Mother: Aboriginal Mothering, “Neglectful” Caregiving, and Symbolic Violence in the Ontario Child Welfare System
Mark My Words: Native Women Mapping Our Nations
Our Women and Girls Are Sacred: Interim Report: The National Inquiry into Missing and Murdered Indigenous Women and Girls
Responding to Human Trafficking: Dispossession, Colonial Violence, and Resistance among Indigenous and Racialized Women
The Search for Consensus: A Legislative History of Bill C-31, 1969–1985
Examines Aboriginal women's rights, membership issues, government thinking and rationale, and Aboriginal perspectives. Chapter one 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.
Selected Urban Aboriginal Demography
State of Alaska Task Force on the Crimes of Human Trafficking, Promoting Prostitution and Sex Trafficking: Final Report and Recommendations
Therapeutic Nations: Healing in an Age of Indigenous Human Rights
There Is No Longer Time: Mphatheleni Makaulule on the agency—and urgency—of women’s leadership
To Right Historical Wrongs: Race, Gender, and Sentencing in Canada
Until Yesterday: Deterring and Healing the Cyclical Gender-based Violence in Indian Country
Urban Aboriginal Women in British Columbia and the Impacts of Matrimonial Real Property Regime
Study based on positive and negative experiences of women during marital breakdown.
Chapter eight from Setting the Agenda for Change, vol. 2, which is also vol. 2 in the Aboriginal Policy Research series.
Originally presented at the Aboriginal Policy Research Conference, 2002.