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Aboriginal Governance in Australia
The Aboriginal Health Worker and the Doctor
Aboriginal Mental Health
Aboriginal Youth Policy: An Inventory and Analysis of Federal, Provincial, and Territorial Programs
Arapahoe Politics, 1851-1978: Symbols in Crises of Authority
The Bloody Wake of Alcatraz: Political Repression of the American Indian Movement during the 1970s
Blueprints for Indian Education: Improving Mainstream Schooling
Book Reviews
Breaking the Silence
British Columbia Indian Treaties in Historical Perspective
Canadian Inuit in a Mixed Economy: Thoughts on Seals, Snowmobiles, and Animal Rights
The Canadian State and Native Migrant Labour in Southern Alberta's Sugar Beet Industry
Catholic and Federal Indian Education in the Late l9th Century: Opposed Colonial Models
Clearing Space : Diversion Projects Sentencing Circles and Restorative Justice
Colonizing Bodies: Aboriginal Health and Healing in British Columbia, 1900--1950
Commentary: A Possible Alternative to Research Funding from DIAND
Contrasts Between the Resolution of Native Land Claims in the United States and Canada Based on Observations of the Alaska Native Claims Movement
Cultural Approaches to Native Canadian Housing : An Evaluation of Existing Housing Projects in Cree Communities in Northern Quebec
The Cultural Negotiation of Indigenous Education: Between Microethnography and Model-Building
D.C. Scott's View of History & the Indians
Discusses the seeming inconsistencies between Scott's actions as a bureaucrat for the Dept. of Indian Affairs, and the attitudes expressed in his poetry.
The Decolonization of Canada: Moving Toward Recognition of Aboriginal Governments
Document One: Memorandum for the Hon[uorable] the Indian Commissioner Relative to the Future Management of Indians
Memorandum written July 20, 1885 by Hayter Reed, Assistant Indian Commissioner to Indian Commissioner, Edgar Dewdney outlining policies appropriate to the post-rebellion era. The document is divided in two parts: on the right is text of the memorandum and on the left comments written by Edgard Dewdney.See also Document Two: Reply to the Above Memorandum
Document Two: Reply to the Above Memorandum
Economic Development Strategies and the Micmac of Nova Scotia
Explaining the Little Bighorn: Race and Progress in the Native Press
The Federal Campaign for the Admission of Indian Children into Public Schools, 1890-1934
Federal Indian Affairs Policy
Financing Aboriginal Justice Systems
For the Benefit of Indian Peoples: An Analysis of Indian Land Consolidation Policy
From Wooden Ploughs to Welfare: Why Indian Policy Failed in the Prairie Provinces
From Wooden Ploughs to Welfare: Why Indian Policy Failed in the Prairie Provinces (Book)
The Frontier Army and the Destruction of the Buffalo: 1865-1883
Examines whether there was a direct link between army policy and extermination of the buffalo through a study of "official military reports, personal letters, the reminiscences of retired army officers and ex-buffalo hunters, the observations of Indian Bureau personnel and Indians themselves, along with other eye-witness accounts".