The issue of achieving self-government has long been a concern of many Aboriginal people in Canada. Indian, Metis, and Inuit people were formally recognized in the Canadian constitution in 1982, when s. 35 of the Constitution Act, 1982 proclaimed that the existing aboriginal and treaty rights of the aboriginal people of Canada are hereby recognized and affirmed. But did this include the right to self-government
If ever a text should be required for a foundational American Indian Studies course, The State of th...
When First Nations try to protect their lands and waters it very often involves a struggle against s...
In the aftermath of the 1996 release of the massive report of the Royal Commission on Aboriginal Peo...
The issue of achieving self-government has long been a concern of many Aboriginal people in Canada. ...
Official recognition of indigenous peoples in North America has been a slow and uneven process. Many...
Cairns is critical of suggestions of the Royal Commission on Aboriginal Peoples. In his view, they p...
This timely collection offers perceptive, thought-provoking perspectives on contemporary issues Indi...
This provides a short review and commentary on Peter Russell\u27s extraordinary new work on aborigin...
Aboriginal peoples have received unprecedented attention in Canada in the last five years. Violent c...
The current historiography of the Great Plains Metis finds its roots in the work of Sylvia Van Kirk,...
Natives and Settlers Now and Then is a slim volume that will be of great interest to scholars of Ind...
With the emergence of native issues such as land claims and self-government in the Canadian constitu...
Aboriginal law is one of the most dynamic fields of law in modern Canada. This book helps to clarify...
Hidden in Plain Sight is a book with an unusual agenda: to discuss and publicize the many constructi...
If ever a text should be required for a foundational American Indian Studies course, The State of th...
When First Nations try to protect their lands and waters it very often involves a struggle against s...
In the aftermath of the 1996 release of the massive report of the Royal Commission on Aboriginal Peo...
The issue of achieving self-government has long been a concern of many Aboriginal people in Canada. ...
Official recognition of indigenous peoples in North America has been a slow and uneven process. Many...
Cairns is critical of suggestions of the Royal Commission on Aboriginal Peoples. In his view, they p...
This timely collection offers perceptive, thought-provoking perspectives on contemporary issues Indi...
This provides a short review and commentary on Peter Russell\u27s extraordinary new work on aborigin...
Aboriginal peoples have received unprecedented attention in Canada in the last five years. Violent c...
The current historiography of the Great Plains Metis finds its roots in the work of Sylvia Van Kirk,...
Natives and Settlers Now and Then is a slim volume that will be of great interest to scholars of Ind...
With the emergence of native issues such as land claims and self-government in the Canadian constitu...
Aboriginal law is one of the most dynamic fields of law in modern Canada. This book helps to clarify...
Hidden in Plain Sight is a book with an unusual agenda: to discuss and publicize the many constructi...
If ever a text should be required for a foundational American Indian Studies course, The State of th...
When First Nations try to protect their lands and waters it very often involves a struggle against s...
In the aftermath of the 1996 release of the massive report of the Royal Commission on Aboriginal Peo...