Economic Development a Priority in Nation
Highlights the treaty talks between the First Nations people and the provincial government in British Columbia.
Entire issue on one pdf. To access article scroll to p.17.
The Economic Urgency of Water Rights
Brief article discusses the issues surrounding water allocation to First Nations and the difficulties in resolving the problem due to conflicting jurisdictions.
Entire issue on one pdf. To access article scroll to p.13.
Editorial: [Indigenous Affairs: Bolivia]
Editorial: [Indigenous Affairs: Development and Customary Law]
Editorial: [Indigenous Affairs: International Processes: Perspectives and Challenges]
The Elusive Promise of Indigenous Development: Rights, Culture, Strategy
Emancipation as Oppression: The Marshall Decision and Self-Government
The Emancipatory Potential of Customary Law For the Rights of Women to Access Land
Empowerment of American Indians and the Effect on Political Participation
Encounters with Development Environmental Impact Assessment and Aboriginal Rights
Entwined Histories: Exploring Native-Newcomer Relations via The Native Voice
Entwined Histories: The Creation of the Maisie Hurley Collection of Native Art
Environmental Justice and American-Indian Sovereignty: Political, Economic, and Ethnic Struggles Regarding the Storage of Radioactive Waste
Environmental Racism on Indigenous Lands and Territories
Evaluating the Co-Management Institutions Created By the James Bay and Northern Quebec Agreement and The Inuvialuit Final Agreement With Planning Criteria
Fact, Narrative, and the Judicial Uses of History: Delgamuukw and Beyond
Fighting for Survival: The Swampy Cree of Treaty No. 5 in an Era of Transition, 1875-1930
Filling Up the Land with Pilalt: Countering the British Columbia Referrals Process and Reclaiming Stó:lō Ways of Being on the Land
A Final Promise
Final Report of the Honorable Jean-Jacques Croteau Retired Judge of the Superior Court Regarding the Allegations Concerning the Slaughter of Inuit Sled Dogs in Nunavik (1950-1970)
Finding Our Way: Discussion Guide
First Nation and Métis Consultation Policy Framework
First (National) Space: (Ab)original (Re)Mappings of British Columbia
First Nations and Aboriginal Rights
First Nations Carbon Collaborative—Indigenous Peoples and Carbon Markets: An Annotated Bibliography
The First Nations Governance Act: Implications of Research Findings From the United States and Canada: A Report of the British Columbia Regional Vice-Chief Assembly of First Nations
Argues that the key purpose of the First Nations Governance Act is to assist in building societies that work and are capable of of realizing their own goals.
First Nations’ Involvement in Forest Governance in Québec:
The Place for Distinct Consultation Processes
First Nations Leadership and Spirituality within the Royal Commission on Aboriginal Peoples: A Saskatchewan Perspective
First Nations Right to Timber With Respect to the Management of Lands for Hunting, Fishing & Livelihood, and Housing: Case Law Summary
Case law summary of the major Aboriginal rights and title litigation, and an outline of the resulting forest and range agreements that British Columbia has entered into with community members.
First Nations Self-Government and the Borders of the Canadian Legal Imagination
Fiscal Management Law Major Native Milestone
Fishing for Stories at Burnt Church: the Media, the Marshall Decision and Aboriginal Representation
Food Fish, Commercial Fish, and Fish to Support a Moderate Livelihood: Characterizing Aboriginal and Treaty Rights to Canadian Fisheries
For the Safeguard of Indigenous Territory and Participation
Forests and First Nations Consultation: Analysis of the Legal Framework, Policies, and Practices in British Columbia
Forgotten and Ignored: Special Education in First Nations Schools in Canada
Forgotten People: Approximately 210,000 People in Canada Identify themselves as Métis
Forgotten Veterans: Métis are Now Fighting Ottawa for Compensation
Former National Chief Leads Court Challenge [Bill C-61]
Looks at Federation of Saskatchewan Nations chairman of the executive council of the senate, David Ahenakew, who talked about legal action against the Crown, claiming Prime Minister Jean Chretien and Indian Affairs Minister Robert Nault breached their fiduciary duty by increasing their control and power over the affairs and government of First Nations.
Entire issue on one pdf. To access article scroll to p.1.