This Border Brief describes the latest developments in the use of the Jay Treaty for international tuition waivers at U.S. and Canadian higher education institutions. It is based on research conducted through surveys, interviews, and the author’s previous publications to illustrate opportunities for universities and policy makers to support Indigenous student mobility across the Canada-U.S. border by recognizing the sovereignty and self-determination of Indigenous Nations
This paper examines the relationship between the Government of Canada and First Nations during and a...
This dissertation proposes re-asserting Indigenous legal authority over immigration in the face of s...
On April 29, the Center for Canadian-American Studies at Western Washington University hosted a conf...
In 1794, the United States and Great Britain negotiated the Jay Treaty, established in part to mitig...
Using the Blood reserve in Southern Alberta and the Blackfeet reserve in northern Montana as a case ...
Nearly two centuries later, borders between the U.S. and its neighbors to the north and south contin...
Since 1794, Native American groups in both the United States (U.S.) and Canada have enjoyed the righ...
This note will examine the development and current state of passage rights under United States (Part...
In February of 2017, Western Washington University (WWU) and Northwest Indian College (NWIC) hosted ...
In the winter of 1763, Nipissing and Algonquin messengers were dispatched across Indian country. The...
Economic ties have spanned the contemporary border between Washington State and Canada for as long a...
This thesis argues that the Ned'u'ten, an indigenous people, have the right to decolonize and self-...
The U.S./Mexico border is a site of increased state polices for surveillances, hyper-militarization,...
SSHRC 430-2016-00008Non-Peer ReviewedDuring the nineteenth and early twentieth centuries, the United...
Post-Columbian borderlands between competing Euro-American empires and North America’s indigenous po...
This paper examines the relationship between the Government of Canada and First Nations during and a...
This dissertation proposes re-asserting Indigenous legal authority over immigration in the face of s...
On April 29, the Center for Canadian-American Studies at Western Washington University hosted a conf...
In 1794, the United States and Great Britain negotiated the Jay Treaty, established in part to mitig...
Using the Blood reserve in Southern Alberta and the Blackfeet reserve in northern Montana as a case ...
Nearly two centuries later, borders between the U.S. and its neighbors to the north and south contin...
Since 1794, Native American groups in both the United States (U.S.) and Canada have enjoyed the righ...
This note will examine the development and current state of passage rights under United States (Part...
In February of 2017, Western Washington University (WWU) and Northwest Indian College (NWIC) hosted ...
In the winter of 1763, Nipissing and Algonquin messengers were dispatched across Indian country. The...
Economic ties have spanned the contemporary border between Washington State and Canada for as long a...
This thesis argues that the Ned'u'ten, an indigenous people, have the right to decolonize and self-...
The U.S./Mexico border is a site of increased state polices for surveillances, hyper-militarization,...
SSHRC 430-2016-00008Non-Peer ReviewedDuring the nineteenth and early twentieth centuries, the United...
Post-Columbian borderlands between competing Euro-American empires and North America’s indigenous po...
This paper examines the relationship between the Government of Canada and First Nations during and a...
This dissertation proposes re-asserting Indigenous legal authority over immigration in the face of s...
On April 29, the Center for Canadian-American Studies at Western Washington University hosted a conf...