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Aboriginal Education
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 297

Aboriginal Education

  • Type: Book
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  • Published: 2013-01-01
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  • Publisher: UBC Press

Education is at the heart of the struggle of Aboriginal peoples to regain control over their lives as communities and nations. The promise of education is that it will instruct the people in ways to live long and well, respecting the wisdom of their ancestors and fulfilling their responsibilities in the circle of life. Aboriginal Education documents the significant gains in recent years in fulfilling this promise. It also analyzes the institutional inertia and government policies that continue to get in the way. The contributors to this book emphasize Aboriginal philosophies and priorities in teaching methods, program design, and institutional development. An introductory chapter on policy d...

Overrepresented
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 88

Overrepresented

  • Type: Book
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  • Published: 2023-08-08
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  • Publisher: FriesenPress

The frequency and severity of crime in Canada has been declining, however, the criminalization of Indigenous women is on the rise. How to account for this disparity? With sharp intelligence, inherent wisdom, and the grit of an investigative journalist, Annette Vermette offers new perspectives to academics and the general population regarding the overrepresentation of Indigenous women in prison in Canada. Statistically, Indigenous women are arrested more frequently than those in other demographics, and their prison sentences tend to be longer, indicating that discrimination and colonialism are alive and well in Canada, despite reconciliation efforts. Research shows that neither the offenders ...

Oka
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 282

Oka

On July 11, 1990, tension between white and Mohawk people at Oka, just west of Montreal, took a violent turn. At issue was the town's plan to turn a piece of disputed land in the community of Kanesatake into a golf course. Media footage of rock-throwing white residents and armed, masked Mohawk Warriors facing police across barricades shocked Canadians and galvanized Aboriginal people from coast to coast. In August, Quebec Premier Robert Bourassa called for the Canadian army to step in. Harry Swain was deputy minister of Indian Affairs throughout the 78-day standoff, and his recreation of events is dramatic and opinionated. In Oka, Swain writes frankly about his own role and offers fascinatin...

Down the Warpath to the Cedars
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 303

Down the Warpath to the Cedars

In May 1776 more than two hundred Indian warriors descended the St. Lawrence River to attack Continental forces at the Cedars, west of Montreal. In just three days’ fighting, the Native Americans and their British and Canadian allies forced the American fort to surrender and ambushed a fatally delayed relief column. In Down the Warpath to the Cedars, author Mark R. Anderson flips the usual perspective on this early engagement and focuses on its Native participants—their motivations, battlefield conduct, and the event’s impact in their world. In this way, Anderson’s work establishes and explains Native Americans’ centrality in the Revolutionary War’s northern theater. Anderson’s...

Native Peoples of Québec
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 186

Native Peoples of Québec

Presents a variety of material on the ten native groups of Quebec - the Abenakis, Algonquins, Attikameks, Crees, Hurons, Micmacs, Mohawks, Montagnais, Naskapis and Inuit. Includes discussion of traditional lifestyle and beliefs as well their current way of life.

This Is Not a Peace Pipe
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 193

This Is Not a Peace Pipe

How can indigenous people best assert their legal and political distinctiveness? In This is Not a Peace Pipe, Dale Turner explores indigenous intellectual culture and its relationship to, and within, the dominant Euro-American culture. He contends that indigenous intellectuals need to engage the legal and political discourses of the state, respecting both indigenous philosophies and Western European intellectual traditions. According to Turner, the intellectual conversation about the meaning of indigenous rights, sovereignty, and nationhood must begin by recognizing, firstly, that the discourses of the state have evolved with very little if any participation from indigenous peoples and, seco...

First Nations Education in Canada
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 378

First Nations Education in Canada

  • Type: Book
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  • Published: 2011-11-01
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  • Publisher: UBC Press

Written mainly by First Nations and Metis people, this book examines current issues in First Nations education.

Police Powers in Canada
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 384

Police Powers in Canada

The television spectacles of Oka and the Rodney King affair served to focus public disaffection with the police, a disaffection that has been growing for several years. In Canada, confidence in the police is at an all-time low. At the same time crime rates continue to rise. Canada now has the dubious distinction of having the second highest crime rate in the Western world. How did this state of affairs come about? What do we want from our police? How do we achieve policing that is consistent with the Charter of Rights and Freedoms? The essays in this volume set out to explore these questions. In their introduction, the editors point out that constitutional order is tied to the exercise of power by law enforcement agencies, and that if relations between the police and civil society continue to erode, the exercise of force will rise - a dangerous prospect for democratic societies.

Encyclopedia of Human Rights
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 1766

Encyclopedia of Human Rights

Preface to the first edition