Addressing Inuit Women’s Economic Security and Prosperity in the Resource Extraction Industry
Reports results of literature search and qualitative and quantitative survey data from 29 women living in Arviat, Salluit, Inuvik, and Baker Lake. Study's focus was sexual violence and harassment in the workplace, and identifying gaps, opportunities and recommendations to ensure women's safety and economic security.
Related material: Literature Review.
An Agreement to Vary the Saskatchewan Natural Resources Transfer Agreement Between: The Government of Canada, as Represented by the Minister of Indian Affairs and Northern Development and: The Government of the Province of Saskatchewan, as Represented by the Minister Responsible For the Indian and Metis Affairs Secretariat
Arctic Politics: Conflict and Cooperation in the Circumpolar North
Art, Indigenous Sovereignty, and Resistance in the Age of Big Oil: Corwin Clairmont's Two-Headed Arrow/The Tar Sands Project
Backgrounder: Self-determination & Free, Prior and Informed Consent: Understanding the United Nations Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples
Brief discussion of the right to self-determination in the Declaration, international and Canadian constitutional law, the Delgamuukw, Haida Nation and Tsilhqot’in decisions, and how they impact questions about construction of new oil and gas pipelines
Bibliographie thématique sur les Inuit et l’emploi
Canada's Indians: Norms of Responsible Self-Government Under Federalism
A Complex Culture of the British Columbia Plateau: Traditional Stl'átl'imx Resource Use
Conditions Leading to Grassroots Initiatives for the Co-Management of Subsistence Uses of Wildlife in Alaska
Conservation and the Indian: Clifford Sifton's Commission of Conservation, 1910-1919
Cultural Chasm: A 1960s Hydro Development and the Tsay Keh Dene Native Community of Northern British Columbia
Denial of Genocide in the California Gold Rush Era: The Case of Gary Clayton Anderson
Examines Gary Anderson's claim that the settler's violent acts against the Indigenous population was not genocidal in nature.
Fighting for the Right to Better Health
Laws of the Land: Aboriginal Customary Law, State Law and Sustainable Resource Management in Canada's North
Never Until Now: Indigenous & Racialized Women's Experiences Working in Yukon & Northern British Columbia Mine Camps
Research consisted of survey and semi-structured interviews using open-ended questions with 22 respondents. Study found: limited job opportunityand longevity of employment, inadequate pay scale for hours worked, uequal work expectations, limited opportunities for advancement, inadequate harm prevention, gender or race harassement/discrimination with absence of grievance mechanisms, poor environmental practices, and limited economic benefits to Indigenous people.