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Academic Journals
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From:Alces (Vol. 43) Peer-ReviewedABSTRACT: Presumed extirpated in the early 1900s, moose were re-introduced to Cape Breton Island by the federal Park Service in the late 1940s. After 25 years of gradual growth the population expanded rapidly following...
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From:Canadian Ethnic Studies Journal (Vol. 35, Issue 1) Peer-ReviewedABSTRACT/RESUME This paper applies 1996 Census data to look at the reporting patterns of the Metis population in selected Canadian urban centres. On the 20 Percent Sample of the 1996 Census, people could...
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From:The Canadian Review of Sociology and Anthropology (Vol. 43, Issue 2) Peer-ReviewedAu Canada, la recherche sur la migration des autochtones vers les centres urbains a mis en avant l'importance de facteurs economiques, les mouvements de retour etant expliques comme un echec lie aux difficultes...
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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:Northern Review (Issue 25-26) Peer-ReviewedFor at least the past two decades students of political structures have lamented that British Columbia lags badly behind other provinces in developing government structures and agencies to address specifically northern...
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From:Whispering Wind (Vol. 34, Issue 5) Peer-ReviewedIn October 2003 the world famous Bata Shoe Museum in Toronto opened its special exhibit of native footwear from the Plains and Prairies entitled 'Paths Across the Plains.' Along with their regular standing displays of...
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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:Alberta History (Vol. 54, Issue 1) Peer-ReviewedEditor's Note: Conventional history states that nine persons were killed in the Frog Lake massacre of 1885. As evidence, historians point to declarations made by survivors, trial evidence, and other documents that...
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From:The American Indian Quarterly (Vol. 28, Issue 3-4) Peer-ReviewedIndigenist thinkers have advocated for the recovery and promotion of Traditional Indigenous Knowledge (IK) systems as an important process in decolonizing Indigenous nations and their relationships with settler...
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From:McGill Law Journal (Vol. 46, Issue 3) Peer-ReviewedThe 1996 Report of the Royal Commission on Aboriginal Peoples addressed the difficulties inherent in the domestication of Aboriginal and treaty rights in Canada. While Aboriginal peoples can now legitimately question...
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From:The Chronicle of Higher Education (Vol. 53, Issue 12)Byline: KAREN BIRCHARD In Canada, the federal and Quebec governments are setting up a new college for aboriginal students, and it is scheduled to begin classes in the fall of 2008. The announcement was made at a...
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From:Alternatives Journal (Vol. 30, Issue 1) Peer-ReviewedINDIGENOUS PEOPLE, provincial authorities and international NGOs are opposing mineral exploration by Vancouver-based gold-mining giant Placer Dome in Indonesia's oldest protected forest. Placer Dome and other foreign...
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From:Resources for Feminist Research (Vol. 32, Issue 3-4) Peer-ReviewedThis paper seeks to understand the culture and history of the Nuxalk nation. The author describes her own journey of uncovering her Nuxalk and how this process has been empowering (SM). Women and Environments, no....
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From:Resources for Feminist Research (Vol. 32, Issue 3-4) Peer-ReviewedThis paper explores issues relating to Aboriginal people in child welfare programs. It includes a creative non-fiction testimonial about the author's experiences as an adoptee. This experience is placed within the...
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From:Canadian Woman Studies (Vol. 30, Issue 2-3) Peer-ReviewedLes auteurs de cet article sont un collectif compose de membres des Premieres Nations, des metis, ils habitent la ville ou sur les reserves, ils sont jeunes, il y a des meres, des grands-meres, ils sont les gardiens du...
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From:Manitoba History (Issue 68) Peer-ReviewedBuilt to service the operations of the Sherritt Gordon Mining Company and the Ruttan minesite, Leaf Rapids was a highly planned urban centre commonly represented as a departure from the past and distinguished by attempts...
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From:Northern Review (Issue 36) Peer-ReviewedAbstract: Tahltan Athapaskans at Iskut Village, British Columbia have been challenged by resource developers to explain why hunting camps cannot be moved away from mining activities in the Klappan River watershed. In...
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From:Canadian Woman Studies (Vol. 34, Issue 1-2) Peer-ReviewedSappropriant la litterature feministe autochtone, l'auteure explore les formes contemporaries et historiques des matricultures autochtones coloniale du Canada et met l'emphase sur les traditions de l'economie de partage...
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From:Broken Pencil (Issue 59)For most, the Northwest Coast style of Aboriginal art--with its myth driven, animal based paintings combining thick, dramatic strokes of red and black and expert use of white space--forms the dominant image of Native...
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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...