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American Indian Children at School, 1850-1930
The American Indian in the Great War: Real and Imagined [Part One, Chapter Two]
Australia Apologizes To Aborigines For Stolen Generations
AWCS Host Conference to Create an Awareness
Author discusses the first World Conference of Women's Shelters arguing that governments need to understand that social problems have an economic and historical social basis.
Entire issue on one pdf. To access article scroll to p.11.
A Bitter Lesson: Native Americans and the Government Boarding School Experience, 1890-1940
[Book Reviews]
Canada's Residential School Apology
Cole and Johnson's The Red Moon, 1908-1910: Reimaging African American and Native American Female Education at Hampton
Cultural Healing: Native American Activists Say Boarding School Abuses Harmed the Health of Generations
Dealing with Residential School Survivors: Reconciliation in International Perspective
Domesticity in the Federal Indian Schools: The Power of Authority over Mind and Body
First Nations: Why an Apology is Wrong, and Deceptive:
Bringing Humanity to Bear on the Residential School Atrocity
The Great White Mother: Maternalism and American Indian Child Removal in the American West, 1880-1940
Indian Boarding School Daughters Coming Home: Survival Stories as Oral Histories of Native American Women
Indian Residential Schools Resolution Canada: 2008-2009 Report on Plans and Priorities
The Leadership of Allan Houser
[A Long-Awaited Apology for Residential Schools in 2008]
Native American Boarding Schools: The Education and Cultural Transformation of American Indians under the United States Government Boarding Schools
Not All Sorrys Are Created Equal, Some Are More Equal than ‘Others’
Response to Nielsen et al.: Coyote & Raven Discuss Mathematics, Complexity Theory and Aboriginality
Rethinking Historical Trauma: Narratives of Resilience
Royal Commission on Aboriginal Peoples 143 Open Forum: Presentation by Art Solomon
Royal Commission on Aboriginal Peoples: Discussion between Commissioners and Elders Dominic Eshkakogan, Mary Lou Fox, Rita Corbiere
Royal Commission on Aboriginal Peoples: Further Comments by Babette Bastien
Royal Commission on Aboriginal Peoples: Presentation by Chief Agnes Snow, Canoe Creek Indian Band
Presentation focusing on residential schools and government policy. Snow states that because the federal government wanted to assimilate Aboriginal peoples, they have lost their languages, traditions and values. Family violence, Fetal Alcohol Syndrome, unemployment and poor physical and mental health are problematic on her First Nation, and she calls on the Commission to ensure that her First Nation continues to receive government funding to combat these social problems. A question-and-answer session with the Commissioners follows the presentation.