Human health and quality of life are inseparable from the environment in which we live. For Aboriginal peoples in Canada the history of colonialism, the control by one country over another area and its people and resources, informs both environmental and health issues. Reserve location and size, resource availability or extraction, pollution, and climate change are all environmental factors that influence Aboriginal peoples’ health and are products of colonization. Health challenges facing many Aboriginal communities in Canada that are historically rooted in colonization, include the spread of infectious disease due to overcrowded or insufficient housing, depression and other mental health and social issues linked to abuse and the legacies ...
First Nations, Métis and Inuit Health and the Law: A Framework for the Future charts the development...
While evidence of Indigenous Peoples' climate knowledge and adaptation practices is readily availabl...
The Aboriginal people of Canada are considered to be part of the fourth world because although they ...
The history of the resettlement of Canada by European peoples and the dispossession of Aboriginal pe...
Since the World Conference on Changing Atmosphere was held in Toronto in 1988, Canadians have partic...
The environmental movement is one of the most popular topics in Canadian environmental history. At p...
The history of Canadian food and agriculture is an enormous topic with both a global and deeply pers...
Webcast sponsored by the Irving K. Barber Learning Centre and hosted by Green College. Reflecting th...
Canada is a country of regions and from a biogeographic perspective, it can be useful to take a regi...
Environmental dispossession disproportionately affects the health of Canada’s Aboriginal population,...
TORONTO, June 11, 2019 – National Indigenous History Month in June puts a spotlight on the heritage,...
Environmental dispossession disproportionately affects the health of Canada\u27s Aboriginal populati...
The need for thoughtful histories on contemporary Canadian environmental issues has never been more ...
The environmental movement is one of the most popular topics in Canadian environmental history. At p...
Climate change is expected to affect people’s health and livelihoods in northern Indigenous communi...
First Nations, Métis and Inuit Health and the Law: A Framework for the Future charts the development...
While evidence of Indigenous Peoples' climate knowledge and adaptation practices is readily availabl...
The Aboriginal people of Canada are considered to be part of the fourth world because although they ...
The history of the resettlement of Canada by European peoples and the dispossession of Aboriginal pe...
Since the World Conference on Changing Atmosphere was held in Toronto in 1988, Canadians have partic...
The environmental movement is one of the most popular topics in Canadian environmental history. At p...
The history of Canadian food and agriculture is an enormous topic with both a global and deeply pers...
Webcast sponsored by the Irving K. Barber Learning Centre and hosted by Green College. Reflecting th...
Canada is a country of regions and from a biogeographic perspective, it can be useful to take a regi...
Environmental dispossession disproportionately affects the health of Canada’s Aboriginal population,...
TORONTO, June 11, 2019 – National Indigenous History Month in June puts a spotlight on the heritage,...
Environmental dispossession disproportionately affects the health of Canada\u27s Aboriginal populati...
The need for thoughtful histories on contemporary Canadian environmental issues has never been more ...
The environmental movement is one of the most popular topics in Canadian environmental history. At p...
Climate change is expected to affect people’s health and livelihoods in northern Indigenous communi...
First Nations, Métis and Inuit Health and the Law: A Framework for the Future charts the development...
While evidence of Indigenous Peoples' climate knowledge and adaptation practices is readily availabl...
The Aboriginal people of Canada are considered to be part of the fourth world because although they ...