Summarizes 1961-1962 field studies of settlements resulting from post-World War II development in the Northwest Territories. On criteria of community planning, function, and social structure, seven settlement types are distinguished: isolated technical, e.g. weather stations; military; outpost service, e.g. Dorset; serviced native enclave, e.g. Akudlik at Churchill; regional administrative; frontier; and mining. Each type is characterized as to social organization and population. Civil servants, as to their reaction to settlement life, as is the white settlers, and aboriginals are noted danger of arrested cultural transition among the aboriginals
This thesis analyses the options for Indian land settlements in terms of the social, ecomomic, and c...
This thesis on some aspects of the community organization method in the expansion of welfare service...
Northern Canada was first occupied by man at least 25,000 years ago. The fur trader, the first Europ...
Identifies two types of settlement in the Canadian North, the older centers of transportation, fur-t...
The arctic and subarctic regions of Canada are increasingly developing as integral, participating pa...
Discusses importance of choosing settlement sites which allow for future expansion. Development and ...
This study identifies and assesses the implications for community development in the Northwest Terri...
Contain survey of research problems in relation to future northern settlement. Significance of the r...
Discusses observations made in Inuvik June-Oct 1966 as part of the Mackenzie Delta Research Project....
This thesis is based mainly upon field work among the Cree community at Rupert House, Quebec, in the...
A study was conducted in Inuvik, a planned settlement in the Mackenzie Delta region of the Northwest...
This thesis is a preliminary plan for an active research project which sets as its goal the better u...
The program of the Northern Settlers Re-Establishment Branch comprises one of the most significant a...
Native peoples form a vital part of the social and economic fabric of the Canadian North. Though muc...
Note:This thesis deals with change in Cumberland Sound, Northwest Territories, focussing on the peri...
This thesis analyses the options for Indian land settlements in terms of the social, ecomomic, and c...
This thesis on some aspects of the community organization method in the expansion of welfare service...
Northern Canada was first occupied by man at least 25,000 years ago. The fur trader, the first Europ...
Identifies two types of settlement in the Canadian North, the older centers of transportation, fur-t...
The arctic and subarctic regions of Canada are increasingly developing as integral, participating pa...
Discusses importance of choosing settlement sites which allow for future expansion. Development and ...
This study identifies and assesses the implications for community development in the Northwest Terri...
Contain survey of research problems in relation to future northern settlement. Significance of the r...
Discusses observations made in Inuvik June-Oct 1966 as part of the Mackenzie Delta Research Project....
This thesis is based mainly upon field work among the Cree community at Rupert House, Quebec, in the...
A study was conducted in Inuvik, a planned settlement in the Mackenzie Delta region of the Northwest...
This thesis is a preliminary plan for an active research project which sets as its goal the better u...
The program of the Northern Settlers Re-Establishment Branch comprises one of the most significant a...
Native peoples form a vital part of the social and economic fabric of the Canadian North. Though muc...
Note:This thesis deals with change in Cumberland Sound, Northwest Territories, focussing on the peri...
This thesis analyses the options for Indian land settlements in terms of the social, ecomomic, and c...
This thesis on some aspects of the community organization method in the expansion of welfare service...
Northern Canada was first occupied by man at least 25,000 years ago. The fur trader, the first Europ...