This paper contributes to building respectful relationships between Indigenous (First Nations, Métis, and Inuit) peoples and Canada's cultural memory institutions, such as libraries, archives and museums, and applies to knowledge repositories that hold tangible and intangible traditional knowledge. The central goal of the paper is to advance understandings to allow cultural memory institutions to respect, affirm, and recognize Indigenous ownership of their traditional and living Indigenous knowledges and to respect the protocols for their use. This paper honours the spirit of reconciliation through the joint authorship of people from Indigenous, immigrant, and Canadian heritages. The authors outline the traditional and living importance of ...
While modern indigenous artists, and especially collectives, have been able to resort to traditional...
For more than one hundred years Canada’s national museum of human history, called, successively, the...
This article addresses the clash between Western and Indigenous understandings of how cultural herit...
This paper contributes to building respectful relationships between Indigenous (First Nations, Métis...
This paper contributes to building respectful relationships between Indigenous (First Nations, Métis...
This paper contributes to building respectful relationships between Indigenous (First Nations...
Tangible and intangible forms of indigenous knowledges and cultural expressions are often found in l...
Canada was founded on three legal traditions: common law, civil law, and Indigenous law. Despite thi...
Australian copyright law and Indigenous Cultural and Intellectual Property (ICIP) have always sat un...
Due to copyright restrictions, this item cannot be sharedThere are approximately 500 million Indigen...
This article highlights the extent to which international law has changed rapidly in recent years in...
Aboriginal peoples in Canada have diverse and complex customary protocols regarding a wide range of ...
In Canada, many citizens are justifiably proud of our country’s commitment to multiculturalism and r...
This chapter examines legal issues and principles touching on access to and control of Indigenous kn...
Indigenous or traditional knowledge (IK) holders face a lack of respect and appreciation for such kn...
While modern indigenous artists, and especially collectives, have been able to resort to traditional...
For more than one hundred years Canada’s national museum of human history, called, successively, the...
This article addresses the clash between Western and Indigenous understandings of how cultural herit...
This paper contributes to building respectful relationships between Indigenous (First Nations, Métis...
This paper contributes to building respectful relationships between Indigenous (First Nations, Métis...
This paper contributes to building respectful relationships between Indigenous (First Nations...
Tangible and intangible forms of indigenous knowledges and cultural expressions are often found in l...
Canada was founded on three legal traditions: common law, civil law, and Indigenous law. Despite thi...
Australian copyright law and Indigenous Cultural and Intellectual Property (ICIP) have always sat un...
Due to copyright restrictions, this item cannot be sharedThere are approximately 500 million Indigen...
This article highlights the extent to which international law has changed rapidly in recent years in...
Aboriginal peoples in Canada have diverse and complex customary protocols regarding a wide range of ...
In Canada, many citizens are justifiably proud of our country’s commitment to multiculturalism and r...
This chapter examines legal issues and principles touching on access to and control of Indigenous kn...
Indigenous or traditional knowledge (IK) holders face a lack of respect and appreciation for such kn...
While modern indigenous artists, and especially collectives, have been able to resort to traditional...
For more than one hundred years Canada’s national museum of human history, called, successively, the...
This article addresses the clash between Western and Indigenous understandings of how cultural herit...