Indigenous-Canadian Relations
Showing 161–169 of 169 results
| Title & Subtitle | Abstract | Contributors | Pages | Year | Purchase |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
|
From ![]() Visioning: Our Future PathFrom: Circle Works |
Fyre Jean Graveline | 13 | 1998 | $1.30 Add | |
|
From ![]() Visual Credits |
Melanie Florence | 2 | 2016 | $0.20 Add | |
|
From ![]() What Does It Mean to Be a Movement? A Proposal for a Coherent, Powerful, Indigenous-Led MovementPart III: Future Prospects From: A Line in the Tar Sands |
In Chapter 24 Emily Coats focuses on Indigenous-led movements in Northern Alberta, discussing climate change, climate injustices, pollution, the Crown and Canadian law, and the UN Declaration on … | Emily Coats | 12 | 2014 | $1.20 Add |
|
From ![]() What to Do? “You Must Move and Act”From: Circle Works |
Fyre Jean Graveline | 23 | 1998 | $2.30 Add | |
![]() NEW! When the Pine Needles FallIndigenous Acts of Resistance |
There have been many things written about Canada’s violent siege of Kanehsatà:ke and Kahnawà:ke in the summer of 1990, but When the Pine Needles Fall: Indigenous Acts of … | Audra Simpson; Katsi’tsakwas Ellen Gabriel; Pamela Palmater; Sean Carleton | 280 | 2024 | View |
|
From ![]() NEW! White Paper to Red PaperDrawing the Battle Lines From: Unsettling Canada |
White Paper to Red Paper focuses on the White Papers created by Indian Affairs Minister Jean Chrétien in 1969, which was an attempt to abolish the Indian Act and Indian Status in Canada. The … | Arthur Manuel | 8 | 2021 | $0.80 Add |
|
From ![]() NEW! “With Its Branches You Now Lash Us”The Accelerating Dispossession of Indigenous Peoples, 1780-1820 From: Colonialism and Capitalism: Canada's Origins 1500-1890 |
This chapter examines the increasing dispossession of the Indigenous populations between 1780 and the 1820s as settlement continued westward. | Bryan D. Palmer | 7 | 2024 | $0.70 Add |
|
From ![]() NEW! Women in BetweenFrom Fur Trade Frontier to Métis Nation From: Colonialism and Capitalism: Canada's Origins 1500-1890 |
This chapter examines the impact of the fur trade and colonial expansion in Canada in the nineteenth century on First Nation and Metis women populations. | Bryan D. Palmer | 14 | 2024 | $1.40 Add |
|
From ![]() NEW! Women’s Rights |
In Chapter Six Katsi’tsakwas Ellen Gabriel reflects on the broader spectrum of her activism, particulary in the fight for women’s rights. | Audra Simpson; Katsi’tsakwas Ellen Gabriel; Pamela Palmater; Sean Carleton | 22 | 2024 | $2.20 Add |









