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Academic Journals
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From:The Canadian Geographer (Vol. 51, Issue 3) Peer-ReviewedThis review article explores the significance of studying the historical geographies of Aboriginal women in Northern Quebec and presents potential research avenues. The article's premise is that we cannot understand the...
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From:Canadian Journal of Forest Research (Vol. 38, Issue 2) Peer-ReviewedAbstract: This paper uses survey information to examine several common assertions about the institutional prerequisites for successful profitability when a First Nation enters an economic enterprise either independently...
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From:Canadian Journal of Urban Research (Vol. 19, Issue 1) Peer-ReviewedAbstract We use interview data from four Winnipeg inner-city neighbourhoods to illustrate the strengths and limits of neighbourhood-level responses to safety concerns. We view these local responses through the lens of...
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From:Health Reports (Vol. 28, Issue 7) Peer-ReviewedBackground: Research that has examined Aboriginal children's hospitalization rates at the national level has been limited to analyses of areas with large percentages of Aboriginal residents, rather than of Aboriginal...
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From:Review of Constitutional Studies (Vol. 18, Issue 1)This paper discusses the nature of Indigenous peoples' social order systems and highlights some fundamental "legal" principles that perhaps exemplify many Indigenous nation's legal traditions to a greater or lesser...
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From:Review of Constitutional Studies (Vol. 22, Issue 3)While the concept of reconciliation has become ubiquitous in contemporary Canadian politics, its importation into the political sphere is still a relatively recent phenomenon and is complicated by the ambiguity that...
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From:Canadian Journal of Education (Vol. 43, Issue 2) Peer-ReviewedThe tumultuous history of Indigenous education in Canada has negatively affected the persistence of Indigenous peoples at university. The research goals of this study were to identify the key supports and obstacles...
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From:CMAJ: Canadian Medical Association Journal (Vol. 192, Issue 34) Peer-ReviewedLike most people, Tania Cameron was watching the news intently as the first cases of coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) were reported in Canada. A member of Niisaachewan First Nation and regional coordinator for...
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From:Review of Constitutional Studies (Vol. 24, Issue 1)Canadian federalism is the framework of public law through which to understand constitutional law. It is an incomplete framework, based on settler colonialism, that has had many different cycles. The original federalism,...
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From:Natural Resources Journal (Vol. 56, Issue 2) Peer-ReviewedABSTRACT Mexico's recent energy reform portends a new era of private engagement in the oil and gas sectors. According to government officials and industry leaders, the opening of energy reserves for private...
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From:Alternatives: Global, Local, Political (Vol. 35, Issue 3) Peer-ReviewedThe collapse of the Soviet Union and the reemergence of ethnic conflict in Eastern Europe charged nationalism with renewed interest. In the academic field, the concept and meaning of nationalism became the center of...
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From:Canadian Public Administration (Vol. 51, Issue 2) Peer-ReviewedAbstract: According to the Indian Act, aboriginal women in Canada do not have the same equality rights as aboriginal men living on-reserve and non-aboriginal women living off-reserve. The Indian Act's provisions...
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From:Canadian Journal of Urban Research (Vol. 18, Issue 1) Peer-Reviewed
Interest convergence and co-production of plans: an examination of Winnipeg's 'aboriginal pathways'.
Abstract Attempts to advance the state of planning practice with Aboriginal communities in Winnipeg have met with limited success in recent years. We use the concept of interest convergence to understand the impetus... -
From:Northern Review (Issue 50) Peer-ReviewedAs there is a collective renaissance (1) in the recognition of Indigenous legal traditions and laws in Canada, this reflection focuses on a "constitutive" approach that non-Indigenous Yukoners can take to law making, in...
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From:Urban History Review (Vol. 38, Issue 2) Peer-ReviewedThis article uses settler colonialism as a specific analytic frame through which to understand the historical forces in the formation of settler cities as urbanizing polities. Arguing that we must pay attention to the...
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From:Alternatives Journal (Vol. 42, Issue 1) Peer-ReviewedThe Brant memorial is a poignant reminder of the intimate understanding some of our ancestors had about what is required for healthy and sustainable relations. THE SIX NATIONS Haudenausaunee [Iroquois] and the...
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From:McGill Law Journal (Vol. 66, Issue 2) Peer-ReviewedEn réponse à la disjonction et à l'aliénation des peuples autochtones du système judiciaire canadien, les principes de Gladue sont essentiels à la réconciliation dans la détermination des peines et dans d'autres...
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From:NACLA Report on the Americas (Vol. 44, Issue 5) Peer-ReviewedON AUGUST 9, ABOUT 400 DELEGATES from Ecuador's many social movements joined most of the country's left-wing parties for the First Gathering of Social Movements for Democracy and Life. The gathering, held in Quito,...
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From:Social Analysis (Vol. 51, Issue 2) Peer-ReviewedAbstract: The membership of Colombian indigenous organizations in civil society has been under debate for the past decade. Indigenous organizations themselves have held various positions with respect to their place in...
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From:Canadian Public Administration (Vol. 59, Issue 1) Peer-ReviewedHow have municipal governments in Canada been engaging Aboriginal peoples and First Nations? This project examined municipal Aboriginal relations offices and/or advisory committees across Canada and focuses on four cases...