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Aboriginal Gillnet Fishers, Science, and the State: Salmon Fisheries Management on the Nass and Skeena Rivers, British Columbia, 1951-1961
Bill S-11: The Safe Drinking Water for First Nations Act
A Case Study of Accommodating Indigenous Cultural Values in Water Resource Management: Privatization and Co-Management
Critical Success Factors in the First Nations Fishery of Atlantic Canada: Mi’kmaq and Maliseet Perceptions
Cultural Impact Assessment of the Tukituki Proposed Water Storage Dams
Damned: The Politics of Loss and Survival in Anishinaabe Territory
Documenting First Nations Perspectives on Water: Engaging Fort William First Nation in Source Water Protection Using Photovoice
Education in Movement Spaces: Standing Rock to Chicago Freedom Square
First Nation Capacity In Quebec To Practice Integrated Water Resource Management
Guidance Book: Resources for Winter Roads, Wildfires, Flooding, and Coastal Erosion
Provides support to communities in identifying tools and resources, best practices, and key considerations when responding to impacts of climate change. Appendices Forms part of the Climate Change Adaptation Planning Toolkit for Indigenous Communities. Related material: Guidebooks.
Hidden in Plain Sight: The US Government’s Use of the Choctaw Nation as an Environmental Toxics Dumping Ground
Kindergarten and Early Learning Menu L
Lesson plans for math, literacy and French as a second language using themes from the books The Water Walker, Sharing Our Stories, When We Are Kind, and Let's Play Waltes.
"The Legacy Will Be the Change": Reconciling How We Live with and Relate to Water
Looks at the Indigenous approach towards water knowledge and how this approach can be used in collaboration with Western knowledge systems for water policy making and research.
Local Food Production and Community Illness Narratives: Responses to Environmental Contamination and Health Studies in the Mohawk Community Akwesasne
Lower Elwha Fish Hatchery & Dam Removal
The Management of Fisheries and Oceans in Canada's Western Arctic: Report of the Standing Senate Committee on Fisheries and Oceans
Métis Nation Climate Change & Health Vulnerability Assessment
Murray River Country: An Ecological Dialogue With the Traditional Owners
Native Peoples and Water Rights: Irrigation, Dams, and the Law in Western Canada
Nibi Declaration of Treaty #3 Toolkit
A Powerful Partnership
Restorative Narrative: Nonfiction and the Resetting of the Grasslands' Future
State-Corporate Crime on the Navajo Nation: Human Consumption of Contaminated Waters
Summative Evaluation Report: Infrastructure Canada Program: First Nations Component: Final Version
A Sustainable Wastewater Treatment Screening Tool For Small Remote and First Nation Communities
Traditions and Science: Teacher Manual
Although created for the Old Crow Experiential Educational Project, some activities can be adapted for other contexts. Lessons are grouped by Grades 7-9, Grades 4-6, and Grades 1-3.
Water Stories from Around the World
See: The Hero Twins and the Swallower of Clouds (North America), p. 10.
Koluscap and the Water Monster (North America), p. 53.
Tiddalik the Frog (Australia), p. 60
The Water Walker Written and Illustrated by Joanne Robertson: Teacher Guide
To accompany book about Josephine-ba Mandamim, an Ojibwe Grandmother, and her love for water; she has walked around the Great Lakes to raise awareness of the importance of protecting it for future generations.
Appropriate for use with students aged 6-9 (Grades 1-3). English text with some Ojibwe vocabulary.