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Arapahoe Politics, 1851-1978: Symbols in Crises of Authority
Arctic Twilight
The Battle for Self Government Continues
Beads and Trinkets Take on New Form in Federal Constitutional Proposals for Aboriginal Peoples in Canada
Before Canada: Toward an Ethnohistory of Indian Education
The Blackfoot Confederacy, 1880-1920: A Comparative Study of Canadian and U.S. Indian Policy (Book Review)
Book Reviews
Canadian Inuit in a Mixed Economy: Thoughts on Seals, Snowmobiles, and Animal Rights
Chilocco Indian Boarding School : Tool for Assimilation, Home for Indian Youth
The College on the Hill
Commentary on 'Adhesion to Canadian Indian Treaties and the Lubicon Lake Dispute'
Community Participation in Socio-Legal Control: The Northern Context
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.
Department of National Health and Welfare, Medical Services Branch, Indian and Northern Health Services Directorate Annual Report, Fiscal Year 1987-1988
Determining Okanagan History
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
Documents Two and Three: Dene/Metis Agreement in Principle with the Federal Government and Introduction
Introduction and two documents related to the signing of the Agreement-In-Principal between the Déne and Métis of the North West Territories and Government of Canada resolving a land claim of the Native people.
Early Administrative Developments in Fighting Tuberculosis Among Canadian Inuit: Bringing State Institutions Back In
Economic Development and Innu Settlement: The Establishment of Sheshatshit
The Effects of Native Land Claims on Public Participation in Environmental Impact Assessment in the Canadian North
Empowerment or Termination? Native Rights and Resource Regimes in Alaska and Swedish Lapland
Enough is Enough: Aboriginal Women Speak Out
FED-BOS: The Federally Controlled Band Operated School and the No-Policy Policy
Examines the use of the words "band controlled" for schools, when in actuality the schools remains under the control of the federal government.