This thesis explores the history of the Cheslatta T'en First Nation of Grassy Plains British Columbia in the context of their forced relocation in 1952. The Cheslatta people were once self-reliant and prosperous. They farmed, trapped, hunted and fished in the same territory they had occupied for centuries. The Cheslatta people were a close-knit community who relied only on each other in times of need. All of that changed in April of 1952 when the Department of Indian Affairs informed the people they would have to leave immediately, as their land was about to flood. Shocked and heartbroken, the people packed up the few belongings they could carry and left for Grassy Plains where they lived in tents, shacks and abandoned buildings until they ...
The Stikine and Iskut Rivers in northwest British Columbia form one of the last pristine wilderness ...
This research contributes to the anthropology of disaster, offering an ethnographic account of the i...
This thesis describes how people interacted with the natural environment of Prince George up to 1915...
This thesis explores the history of the Cheslatta T'en First Nation of Grassy Plains British Columbi...
Development in British Columbia has and continues to operate within an extractivist, colonial framew...
Development in British Columbia has and continues to operate within an extractivist, colonial framew...
The building of the Grand Trunk Pacific Railroad across Canada in the years prior to the FIrst World...
Almost every year, Aboriginal communities are evacuated from northern regions of Canada to nearby ci...
Guatemala's history is plagued with development' projects that result in displacement, violence, and...
This thesis, based on my ethnographic research in Moose Factory, Ontario documents the history of Mo...
During the 1960s, residents of isolated Kwakiutl Indian communities, located near the northern tip o...
This thesis investigates the changing role of First Nations in the oil and gas policy community in n...
The overall goal of this thesis is to center ways Snuneymuxw First Nation (SFN) have known how to li...
ABSTRACTLake St. Martin First Nation, a community situated in the Interlake Region of Manitoba, was ...
The social and environmental impacts of large-scale industrial development have had direct and exten...
The Stikine and Iskut Rivers in northwest British Columbia form one of the last pristine wilderness ...
This research contributes to the anthropology of disaster, offering an ethnographic account of the i...
This thesis describes how people interacted with the natural environment of Prince George up to 1915...
This thesis explores the history of the Cheslatta T'en First Nation of Grassy Plains British Columbi...
Development in British Columbia has and continues to operate within an extractivist, colonial framew...
Development in British Columbia has and continues to operate within an extractivist, colonial framew...
The building of the Grand Trunk Pacific Railroad across Canada in the years prior to the FIrst World...
Almost every year, Aboriginal communities are evacuated from northern regions of Canada to nearby ci...
Guatemala's history is plagued with development' projects that result in displacement, violence, and...
This thesis, based on my ethnographic research in Moose Factory, Ontario documents the history of Mo...
During the 1960s, residents of isolated Kwakiutl Indian communities, located near the northern tip o...
This thesis investigates the changing role of First Nations in the oil and gas policy community in n...
The overall goal of this thesis is to center ways Snuneymuxw First Nation (SFN) have known how to li...
ABSTRACTLake St. Martin First Nation, a community situated in the Interlake Region of Manitoba, was ...
The social and environmental impacts of large-scale industrial development have had direct and exten...
The Stikine and Iskut Rivers in northwest British Columbia form one of the last pristine wilderness ...
This research contributes to the anthropology of disaster, offering an ethnographic account of the i...
This thesis describes how people interacted with the natural environment of Prince George up to 1915...