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Margot Hurlbert, John Bosco Acharibasam, Ranjan Datta, Sharon Strongarm and Ethel Starblanket
Indigenous Peoples in Canada have shown great strength and resilience in maintaining their cultures and ways of life to date in the face of settler colonialism. Centering the Water crises within Indigenous sovereignty and self-determination, we explore t...
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Susanne Thiessen
The paper seeks to understand organisational context and culture?s influence on engaging First Nations People in Canada in work. Organisations have many opportunities to attract and engage Indigenous people, who have distinct worldviews and unique cultur...
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Nicole J. Wilson, Leila M. Harris, Angie Joseph-Rear, Jody Beaumont and Terre Satterfield
There is growing acknowledgement that the material dimensions of water security alone are inadequate; we also need to engage with a broader set of hydrosocial relationships. Indeed, more holistic approaches are needed to explain Indigenous peoples? relat...
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Caleigh Estelle Inman
Pág. 227 - 261
This paper contemplates the absence of Indigenous perspectives within autism discourse in Canada, despite increasing concern and surveillance over a growing autism ?epidemic.? I posit that the simultaneous production of a fetal alcohol spectrum disorder ...
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Deborah Curran
While international instruments and a few state governments endorse the ?free, prior and informed consent? of Indigenous peoples in decision-making about the water in their traditional territories, most state water governance regimes do not recognize Ind...
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Cameron Greensmith
Pág. 19 - 42
Disability studies scholarship in Canada continues to place the experiences, identities and embodiments of Indigenous peoples in places of marginality. This paper offers to correct this by centralizing land struggles and the activism done by Indigenous p...
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