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The Lubicon Lake Nation

The Lubicon Lake Nation
Author: Dawn Martin-Hill
Publisher: University of Toronto Press
Total Pages: 201
Release: 2008-01-01
Genre: Social Science
ISBN: 0802078281

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The Lubicon Lake Nation strives, through a critique of historically-constructed colonial images, to analyze the Canadian government's actions vis-?-vis the rights of the Lubicon people.


Lubicon Lake

Lubicon Lake
Author: Lubicon Lake Indian Nation
Publisher:
Total Pages: 140
Release: 1989
Genre: Indian reservations
ISBN:

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Lubicon Lake Nation [microform] : Spirit of Resistance

Lubicon Lake Nation [microform] : Spirit of Resistance
Author: Dawn J. Hill
Publisher: National Library of Canada = Bibliothèque nationale du Canada
Total Pages: 209
Release: 1995
Genre: Cree Indians
ISBN: 9780612026032

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Framing the Intervention

Framing the Intervention
Author: Dietlind L. R. Bork
Publisher:
Total Pages: 201
Release: 2012
Genre: Cree Indians
ISBN:

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In 2009, against the backdrop of halted land claim negotiations and increasing oil extraction from Lubicon traditional territory, a challenge was brought against the Lubicon custom election code. The challenge triggered a response from band members, a response later dismissed by Indian and Northern Affairs Canada (INAC). This thesis presents the resulting situation as an impasse between conceptual frames. On the one hand, the majority of Lubicon people understand the issue of the disputed election code to have been resolved according to Lubicon custom. On the other hand, INAC officials have determined the Lubicon situation to be an ongoing internal leadership dispute, a determination that requires INAC to appoint a third party to manage Lubicon affairs on behalf of the Lubicon people. The thesis examines this intervention, and the consequences for the Lubicon, not as an INAC response to financial default, but as a political response stemming from INAC's interests.


International Human Rights

International Human Rights
Author: Hurst Hannum
Publisher: Aspen Publishing
Total Pages: 1560
Release: 2017-09-15
Genre: Law
ISBN: 1454892595

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The Sixth Edition of International Human Rights provides students with an accessible, problem-based pedagogy that forces them consider the fundamental human rights issues of from political and legal perspectives. Balancing practical considerations and underlying theory, this outstanding and newly expanded authorship team delivers a comprehensive text that examines the historical underpinnings and contemporary considerations that animate human rights efforts across the globe. Professors and students will benefit from: Streamlined text with contents being more intuitive; eliminating the underutilized section on International Criminal Law and reapportioning those materials elsewhere, and condensing the International Humanitarian Law section. Thoroughly updated text that includes recent scholarship, reports from International Tribunals, and changes in International Human Rights landscape. An incorporation of recent resolutions from international tribunals and decisions for international adjudicatory bodies.


Red Mitten Nationalism

Red Mitten Nationalism
Author: Estée Fresco
Publisher: McGill-Queen's Press - MQUP
Total Pages: 176
Release: 2022-12-15
Genre: Sports & Recreation
ISBN: 0228015154

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When Canada hosted the 1976 Montreal Olympics, few Canadian spectators waved flags in the stands. By 2010, in the run-up to the Vancouver Olympics, thousands of Canadians wore red mittens with white maple leaves on the palms. In doing so, they turned their hands into miniature flags that flew with even a casual wave. Red Mitten Nationalism investigates this shift in Canadians’ displays of patriotism by exploring how common understandings of Canadian history and identity are shaped at the intersection of sport, commercialism, and nationalism. Through case studies of recent Canadian-hosted Olympic and Commonwealth Games, Estée Fresco argues that representations of Indigenous Peoples’ cultures are central to the way everyday Canadians, corporations, and sport organizations remember the past and understand the present. Corporate sponsors and games organizers highlight selective ideas about the nation’s identity, and unacknowledged truths about the history and persistence of Settler colonialism in Canada haunt the commercial and cultural features of these sporting events. Commodities that represent the nation – from disposable trinkets to carefully curated objects of nostalgia – are not uncomplicated symbols of national pride, but rather reminders that Canada is built on Indigenous land and Settlers profit from its natural resources. Red Mitten Nationalism challenges readers to re-evaluate how Canadians use sport and commercial practices to express their patriotism and to understand the impact of this expression on the current state of Indigenous-Settler relations.


Lubicon Lake Indian Band

Lubicon Lake Indian Band
Author: Lubicon Lake Indian Nation
Publisher:
Total Pages: 91
Release: 1988
Genre: Indigenous peoples
ISBN:

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The paper contains positions of the Government of Canada, the Government of Alberta, third party interests and the Band's position on issues raised by the Band. The issues discussed include entitlement to reserve, subsurface rights with reserve lands, wildlife management and environmental protection programs, employment opportunities and job training, general compensation and compensation for pass loss with respect to land claims, oil and gas revenues, treaty benefits, programs and services, loss of livelihood from trapping and hunting, and future losses, compensation for trespass, waste, and destruction of culture and lifestyle, catch-up development and social benefit programs (both general and education), and rights of self-government, including determination of membership.


Women of the First Nations

Women of the First Nations
Author: Christine Miller
Publisher: Univ. of Manitoba Press
Total Pages: 224
Release: 1996-08-15
Genre: Social Science
ISBN: 0887550274

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"From diversity comes strength and wisdom": this was the guiding principle for selecting the articles in this collection. Because there is no single voice, identity, history, or cultural experience that represents the women of the First Nations, a realistic picture will have many facets. Accordingly, the authors in Women of the First Nations include Native and non-Native scholars, feminists, and activists from across Canada.Their work examines various aspects of Aboriginal women's lives from a variety of theoretical and personal perspectives. They discuss standard media representations, as well as historical and current realities. They bring new perspectives to discussions on Aboriginal art, literature, historical, and cultural contributions, and they offer diverse viewpoints on present economic, environmental, and political issues.This collection counters the marginalization and silencing of First Nations women's voices and reflects the power, strength, and wisdom inherent in their lives.


In the Way of Development

In the Way of Development
Author: Mario Blaser
Publisher: IDRC
Total Pages: 373
Release: 2004
Genre: Social Science
ISBN: 1552500047

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Authored as a result of a remarkable collaboration between indigenous people's own leaders, other social activists and scholars from a wide range of disciplines, this volume explores what is happening today to indigenous peoples as they are enmeshed, almost inevitably, in the remorseless expansion of the modern economy and development, at the behest of the pressures of the market-place and government. It is particularly timely, given the rise in criticism of free market capitalism generally, as well as of development. The volume seeks to capture the complex, power-laden, often contradictory features of indigenous agency and relationships. It shows how peoples do not just resist or react to the pressures of market and state, but also initiate and sustain "life projects" of their own which embody local history and incorporate plans to improve their social and economic ways of living.


Resource Exploitation in Native North America

Resource Exploitation in Native North America
Author: Bruce E. Johansen
Publisher: Bloomsbury Publishing USA
Total Pages: 343
Release: 2016-01-11
Genre: History
ISBN:

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This wide-ranging survey of the environmental damage to Native American lands and peoples in North America—in recent times as well as previous decades—documents the continuing impact on the health, wellness, land, and communities of indigenous peoples. Beginning in the early 1950s, Native peoples were recruited to mine "yellow dust"—uranium—and then, over decades, died in large numbers of torturous cancers. Uranium-induced cancers have become the deadliest plague unleashed upon Native peoples of North America—one with grave consequences impacting generations of American Indian families. Today, resource-driven projects such as the Keystone XL pipeline continue to put the health and safety of American Indians at risk. Authored by an expert with 40 years of experience in the subject, this book documents the environmental provocations afflicting Native American peoples in the United States: from the toll of uranium mining on the Navajos to the devastation wrought by dioxin, PCBs, and other pollutants on the agricultural economy of the Akwesasne Mohawk reservation in northernmost New York. The detailed personal stories of human suffering will enable readers to grasp the seriousness of the injustices levied against Native peoples as a result of corporations' and governments' greed for natural resources.