Buffalo Treaty – Women’s journey with the wild Buffalo in Banff National Park 2020
This short video tells the story of nine women who worked to reintroduce bison to Banff National Park in 2017.
This short video tells the story of nine women who worked to reintroduce bison to Banff National Park in 2017.
This website presents the Eeyou Marine Region (EMR), the area of the offshore that the Crees have traditionally occupied.
The purpose of this draft report is to provide a historical overview of the experiences of the Algonquins of Barriere Lake and to develop possible approaches to reconciliation of resource and land use in their territories.
This book discusses the two major schools of thought in Indigenous-Settler relations: resurgence and reconciliation.
This book contains chapters from Indigenous and non-Indigenous scholars who discuss the challenges of treaty relationships today. It also examines how Indigenous legal and policy frameworks can be incorporated to build healthier relationships and a better path forward.
This book is based on a number of Treaty Elders forums, covering topics such as Indigenous conceptions of the land, living together, sacred promises, and evolving interpretations of Treaty Rights. This book has a particular focus on Saskatchewan.
This book shares stories from people and communities who have lived under treaties in Canada from the perspectives of both Indigenous and non-Indigenous allies. It makes a strong case for the importance of understanding treaties in today's context.
This 2-page backgrounder outlines the Haida Gwaii / Queen Charlotte Islands Framework Agreement, which explains how the Council of the Haida Nation and the government of British Columbia will work together to establish a land-use planning process.
This book analyses Treaty 1 from the perspective of Anishinabe laws (inaakinigewin).
This book explores Treaties One through Seven between the Canadian government and Indigenous nations in the Great Plains. The book challenges the idea that cultural misunderstandings led to the treaties and argues that the Canadian government deliberately misled Indigenous nations over governance, reserved lands, and resource sharing.