During the first half of the twentieth century, northern Quebec was under federal jurisdiction. Tired of English Canadian supremacy and increasingly aware of northern Quebec’s considerable natural resources, which could provide a solid basis for future moves toward independence, the Quebec government began to take over responsibility for its northern territories in the 1960s. It established a regional administration to take charge of its northern affairs and sent officers to northern Quebec’s remote communities. For two decades, both governments administered the region and imposed two political systems on the local Inuit. This article is based on lengthy fieldwork and archival research. The historical background is described to show how Nun...
For over a decade, there has been emotionally charged debate over past efforts by the provincial and...
© Cambridge University Press 2016. This paper compares four maps produced by the Canadian governmen...
The article examines the reality of Nunavut, a community of only 27,000 people, most of them Inuit (...
During the first half of the twentieth century, northern Quebec was under federal jurisdiction. Tire...
This article after a brief introduction which describes the Inuit of Canada and their administrative...
This thesis examines the impact of the 'Nunavut Project' on Inuit identity, governance, and society....
ABSTRACT. In 1976, Inuit leaders in what is now Nunavut began the long process that led to a compreh...
In recent years, Inuit peoples in the Circumpolar North have made tremendous strides towards realizi...
Despite forty years of institutional innovation across Northern Canada â including the creation of...
Nunavut is important to indigenous peoples everywhere. Inuit hunter-gatherers living scattered over ...
The purpose of this study is to analyze and explain why two Inuit regions in Canada, Nunavik and Nun...
This thesis studies the socio-political evolution of Nunavut, a proposed political entity in the Can...
The Government of Nunavut and the Nunavut Land Claims Agreement organizations have been making a lot...
The purpose of this paper is to sketch how Inuit and the Canadian public, and Inuit organisations an...
On April first, Nunavut became a reality - the first change in Canada's geopolitical boundaries sinc...
For over a decade, there has been emotionally charged debate over past efforts by the provincial and...
© Cambridge University Press 2016. This paper compares four maps produced by the Canadian governmen...
The article examines the reality of Nunavut, a community of only 27,000 people, most of them Inuit (...
During the first half of the twentieth century, northern Quebec was under federal jurisdiction. Tire...
This article after a brief introduction which describes the Inuit of Canada and their administrative...
This thesis examines the impact of the 'Nunavut Project' on Inuit identity, governance, and society....
ABSTRACT. In 1976, Inuit leaders in what is now Nunavut began the long process that led to a compreh...
In recent years, Inuit peoples in the Circumpolar North have made tremendous strides towards realizi...
Despite forty years of institutional innovation across Northern Canada â including the creation of...
Nunavut is important to indigenous peoples everywhere. Inuit hunter-gatherers living scattered over ...
The purpose of this study is to analyze and explain why two Inuit regions in Canada, Nunavik and Nun...
This thesis studies the socio-political evolution of Nunavut, a proposed political entity in the Can...
The Government of Nunavut and the Nunavut Land Claims Agreement organizations have been making a lot...
The purpose of this paper is to sketch how Inuit and the Canadian public, and Inuit organisations an...
On April first, Nunavut became a reality - the first change in Canada's geopolitical boundaries sinc...
For over a decade, there has been emotionally charged debate over past efforts by the provincial and...
© Cambridge University Press 2016. This paper compares four maps produced by the Canadian governmen...
The article examines the reality of Nunavut, a community of only 27,000 people, most of them Inuit (...