La communauté comme sujet et objet du droit: implications
Comparative Governance Structures Among Aboriginal Peoples in Canada
Discusses the self-government issues of legitimacy, power and resources, by using examples of current agreements. The article breaks the areas down in terms of: basic principles, rights through treaties, federal-provincial division of power, status of lands, legislative powers, and funding.
Related Material: Fact Sheet.
The Concept of Duality in Culture and Myths of Lakota Indians
Constituting an Osage Nation: Histories, Citizenships, and Sovereignties
Constitutional Reconciliation of Education for Aboriginal Peoples
The Constitutional Status and Rights of the Métis People in Canada
Contested Place: Religion and Values in the Dispute, Burnt Church/Esgenoôpetitj, New Brunswick
The Continuous Process of Recognition and Implementation of the Sami People's Right to Self-Determination
Controlling Land: Historical Representations of News Discourse in British Columbia
Courts Poor Venue to Resolve Treaty Land Claims
Courts Should Not Rule Over Land Claims
Creating Sustainable Economic Development Within Two B.C. First Nations Communities: A Rights-Based Approach
The Crown’s Constitutional Duty to Consult and Accommodate Aboriginal and Treaty Rights
Cultural Preservation and Self-determination through Land Use Planning: A Framework for the Fort Albany First Nation
Cumberland House Cree Nation, Cumberland Reserve 100A Claim, Public Edition, July 2008
USE FIREFOX FOR BEST VIEWING AND FUNCTIONALITY OF THIS RECORD. Consists of historical documents, submissions, correspondence/letters, transcripts, treaties, legal documents and the Final Report in English and French. [These files were created and compiled by the ICC and provided to the Indigenous Studies Portal in 2009 to make widely available in online format.]
Dale Turner. This is Not a Peace Pipe: Towards a Critical Indigenous Philosophy
[Daniels in Context]
Daniels Through the Lens of the UN Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples
Daniels v. Canada: Origins, Intentions, Futures
Day of Action Serious Attempt to Convey Message
Deal? Or No Deal? Explaining Comprehensive Land Claims Negotiation Outcomes in Canada
A Deal's a Deal - Kelowna Accord 1 (National Chief Fontaine)
Dealing with the “Community Conundrum”: Métis Responses to the Application of R v Powley in British Columbia—Litigation, Negotiation, and Practice
Deaths of Children puts Child Welfare System in Hot Seat
Reports on an investigation by Mary Ellen Turpel-Lafond, into the deaths of four children in British Columbia which questions the child welfare system.
Entire issue on one pdf. To access article scroll to p.5.
Debate on Aboriginal People in the House of Commons
[Deciphering Inuit Land Claims]
Decolonization is a Global Project: From Palestine to the Americas
Deconstructing the Master's House with His Own Tools: Code-Switching and Double-Voiced Discourse as Agency in Gerald Vizenor's Heirs of Columbus
Destabilizing the Consultation Framework in Alberta's Tar Sands
Different from All the "Others": Mobility and Independence among Greenlandic Students in Denmark
Digital Resources for Settler Colonialism, Effects on Indigenous Peoples and the Issue of Genocide in World History
Discrimination of the Sami: The Rights of the Sami From a Discrimination Perspective
Dissent Along the Borders of the Fourth World: Native American Writings as Social Protest
“Do Not Take Them from Myself and My Children for Ever”: Aboriginal Water Rights in Treaty 7 Territories and the Duty to Consult
Documenting Tradition: Territoriality and Textuality in Black Hawk’s Narrative
Donald Joe Sheridan Interview
Donald Trump, Andrew Jackson, Lebensraum, and Manifest Destiny
The Draft for a Nordic Saami Convention
Drinking Colonialism: Alcohol, Indigenous Status, and Native Space on Shawnee and Sámi Homelands, 1600-1850
Duncan's First Nation Wrongful Surrender Claim, Public Edition, September 2008
FILES CAN ONLY BE ACCESSED USING FIREFOX BROWSER. Contents consist of historical documents, maps, reports, legal documents, transcripts, correspondence/letters, submissions and the Inquiry Report in English and French versions. [These files were created and compiled by the ICC and provided to the Indigenous Studies Portal in 2009 to make widely available in online format.]