UBC Press First Nations Studies Catalogue 2009-2010

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    First NationsStudies

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    09First Nations Studies

    www.ubcpress.ca

    About UBC Press

    UBC Press is the publishing

    imprint of the University of British

    Columbia. We are Canadas leading

    social sciences publisher and its

    fastest-growing scholarly press.In

    addition to publishing sixty

    new books annually, UBC Press

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    Acknowledgments

    UBC Press acknowledges the

    financial support of the Government

    of Canada through the Book

    Publishing Industry Development

    Program (BPIDP); the assistance of

    the Province of British Columbia

    through the British Columbia Arts

    Council and the Humanities andSocial Science Federation of Canada

    (Aid to Scholarly Publications

    Programme); and the Canada

    Council for the Arts in grateful

    recognition of its major contribution

    to all aspects of Canadian culture.

    Award-winning books by authors Leslie Dawn, John Sutton Lutz, Douglas C. Harris, and

    Cole Harris. To see other award-winning books, visit: www.ubcpress.ca/books/awards.

    Cover image credit: Jeremy Crowle 2009

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    First NatioNs studies on FmMetis Culture in Nineteenth-CenturyNorthwestern Saskatchewan

    Bn M

    BreNda Macdougall is

    an associate proessor in theDepartment o Native Studies atthe University o Saskatchewan.

    November 2009320 pages, 6 x 9978-0-7748-1729-5 hc$85.00978-0-7748-1730-1 pB$34.95(PB, July 2010)

    In One o the FamilyBrenda Macdougall draws

    on diverse written and oral sources and employsthe concept o wahkootowin the Cree termor a worldview that privileges amily and valuesrelatedness between all beings to trace theemergence o a distinct Metis community at le--la-Crosse in northern Saskatchewan.

    This path-breaking study showcases how one Metiscommunity created a distinct identity rooted inAboriginal values about amily and shaped by the ur

    trade and the Roman Catholic Church. It also oersa model or uture research and discussion that willappeal to anyone interested in the history o the urtrade or Metis culture and identity.

    tb cnn

    Acknowledgments; Note on Methodology and Sources;Note on Writing Conventions

    Introduction1 They are strongly attached to the country o Rivers,

    Lakes, and Forests: The Social Landscapes o the

    English River District2 The bond that connected one human being to another:

    Social Construction o the Metis Family3 Living in the Lands o their Mothers: Residency and

    Patronymic Connections across the English River District4 Ater a Man Has Tasted o the Comorts o Married

    Lie This Living Alone Comes Pretty Tough: Family,Acculturation, and Roman

    Catholicism5 The only men obtainable who know the country and

    Indians are all married: Family, Labour, and the HBC

    6 The HalBreeds o this Place Always Did and AlwaysWill Dance: Competition, Freemen, and ContestedSpaces

    7 I Thought it Advisable to Furnish Him: Freemen toFree Traders in the English River Fur Trade

    ConclusionAppendix; Notes; Glossary; Bibliography

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    First NatioNs studies ubnn FnIndigenous Peoples and Settlers in 19th-Century Pacifc Rim Cities

    pn emn

    peNelope edMoNds is an

    Australian Research CouncilPostdoctoral Fellow in theSchool o Historical Studies,University o Melbourne.

    December 2009352 pages, 6 x 9978-0-7748-1621-2 hc$85.00978-0-7748-1622-9 pB$32.95

    This book makes an original and highly important

    contribution to the specic historiographies o Canadaand Australia, as well as the broader literatureson colonialism, urban development, and race ...Transnational comparative analysis is an increasinglyimportant approach to understanding the past,especially in the study o colonialism and settler-indigenous relations, and to my knowledge no otherstudy with this scope and theoretical bent has beenpublished. Lisa-Anne Chilton, Department o History,

    University o Prince Edward Island

    tb cnn

    Illustrations; AbbreviationsIntroduction1 Two Distant Extremities o the British Empire Might Thus

    be Made to Join Hands: A Comparative Study o TwoPacic Settler-Colonial Cities

    2 Settler Colonial Cities: Bodies and Spaces in Transition onthe Pacic Rim

    3 This Grand Object: Building Towns in Indigenous Space

    4 First Nations Space, Proto-Colonial Space5 The Imagined City and its Dislocations: Segregation,

    Gender, and Town Camps6 Narratives o Race in the Streetscape: Fears o

    Miscegenation and Making White Subjects7 From Bedlam to Incorporation: First Nations Peoples,

    Public Space and the Emerging City8 Nervous Hybridity in the Streetscape: Bodies, Spaces and

    the Displacements o EmpireConclusionNotes; Bibliography; Index

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    First NatioNs studies F Nn, F tThe Impact o Indigenous Thought in Canada

    e b ann M tmn

    aNNis May tiMpsoN is

    director o the Centre oCanadian Studies at theUniversity o Edinburgh.

    May 2009336 pages, 6 x 9978-0-7748-1551-2 hc$85.00978-0-7748-1552-9 pB$32.95(PB, January 2010)

    First Nations, First Thoughts is a comprehensive

    argument or decolonization, ocusing specicallyon the reconciliation o Indigenous thought with atransormed discourse o the Canadian state andwith many o the institutions o Canadian society ...This book has no rival in its coverage o the multipleissues involved in the search or reconciliation. Alan C. Cairns, author o Citizens Plus: Aboriginal

    Peoples and the Canadian State

    tb cnn

    AcknowledgmentsIntroduction: Indigenous Thought in Canada / Annis MayTimpson

    p 1: cnn dmnn d

    1 First Nations Perspectives and Historical Thinking inCanada / Robin Jarvis Brownlie

    2 Being Indigenous within the Academy: Creating Space orIndigenous Scholars / Margaret Kovach

    p 2: o h n F Nn Nv

    3 Respecting Oral Histories o First Nations: CopyrightComplexities in Archiving Aboriginal Stories / Leslie

    McCartney4 Npi and the City: Siksikaitsitapi Narratives Revisited /

    Martin Whittles and Tim Pattersonp 3: c h n rnn

    5 Colonial Photographs and Postcolonial Relationships: TheKainai-Oxord Photographic Histories Project / LauraPeers and Alison K. Brown

    6 Museums Taken to Task: Representing First Peoples at theMcCord Museum o Canadian History / Stephanie Bolton

    p 4: abn t n innvn n sbnn

    gvnn

    7 The Manitoba Governments Shit to Autonomous FirstNations Child Welare: Empowerment or Privatization? /Fiona MacDonald

    8 Rethinking the Administration o Government: InuitRepresentation, Culture, and Language in the NunavutPublic Service / Annis May Timpson

    9 A Fine Balance? Aboriginal Peoples in the Canadian Northand the Dilemma o Development / Gabrielle A. Slowey

    p 5: tnkn Bk, lkn F: p n

    cnn rnn

    10 Civilization, Sel-Determination, and Reconciliation /

    Michael Murphy11 Take 35: Reconciling Constitutional Orders / Kiera L.

    LadnerContributors; Index

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    First NatioNs studies skn ovEnvironmental Justice in Canada

    e b Jn amn, p c, rn

    h-dl, n p or

    JuliaN agyeMaN is a

    proessor in and chair o theDepartment o Urban andEnvironmental Policy andPlanning at Tuts University.peter cole is an associateproessor o Aboriginal andNorthern Studies at theUniversity College o the North.raNdolph haluza-delayis an assistant proessor o

    sociology at Kings UniversityCollege. pat oriley is anassociate proessor in theDepartment o Equity Studies,Faculty o Liberal Arts &Proessional Studies at YorkUniversity.

    May 2009288 pages, 6 x 9

    978-0-7748-1618-2 hc $85.00978-0-7748-1619-9 pB $34.95(PB, January 2010)

    Speaking or Ourselves is one o the most important

    books I have read in a long time. It has prooundlyshaped my thinking about the scholarly and politicalwork being done on environmental justice issuesand about the world we live in and share withother beings ... This book will extend the elds oenvironmental justice studies and indigenous studiesin new and productive ways. David Pellow, author o Resisting Global Toxics:

    Transnational Movements or EnvironmentalJustice

    tb cnn

    Prologue. Notes rom Prison: Protecting Algonquin Landsrom Uranium Mining / Robert Lovelace

    Introduction. Speaking or Ourselves, Speaking Together:Environmental Justice in Canada / Randolph Haluza-DeLay, Pat ORiley, Peter Cole, and Julian Agyeman

    1 Honouring Our Relations: An Anishnaabe Perspective onEnvironmental Justice / Deborah McGregor

    2 Reclaiming Ktaqamkuk: Land and Mikmaq Identity inNewoundland / Bonita Lawrence

    3 Why Is There No Environmental Justice in Toronto? Or IsThere? / Roger Keil, Melissa Ollevier, and Erica Tsang

    4 Invisible Sisters: Women and Environmental Justice inCanada / Barbara Rahder

    5 The Political Economy o Environmental Inequality: TheSocial Distribution o Risk as an Environmental Injustice /S. Harris Ali

    6 These Are Lubicon Lands: A First Nation Forced to Stepinto the Regulatory Gap / Chie Bernard Ominayak, withKevin Thomas

    7 Population Health, Environmental Justice, and the

    Distribution o Diseases: Ideas and Practices romCanada / John Eyles

    8 Environmental Injustice in the Canadian Far North:Persistent Organic Pollutants and Arctic Climate Impacts/ Sarah Fleisher Trainor, Anna Godduhn, Lawrence K.Duy, F. Stuart Chapin III, David C. Natcher, Gary Konas, and Henry P. Huntington

    9 Environmental Justice and Community-BasedEcosystem Management / Maureen G. Reed

    10 Framing Environmental Inequity in Canada: A ContentAnalysis o Daily Print News Media / Leith Deacon and

    Jamie Baxter11 Environmental Justice as a Politics in Place: An Analysis

    o Five Canadian Environmental Groups Approaches toAgro-Food Issues / Lorelei L. Hanson

    12 Rethinking Green Multicultural Strategies / BeenashJari

    13 Coyote and Raven Talk about Environmental Justice / PatORiley and Peter Cole

    Contributors; Index

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    First NatioNs studies hn tnThe Mental Health o Aboriginal Peoples inCanadae b ln J. Km n g g

    Vkk

    laureNce J. KirMayeris James McGill Proessorand Director o the Divisiono Social and TransculturalPsychiatry, McGill University;Director o the Culture andMental Health Research Unito the Institute or Communityand Family Psychiatry, JewishGeneral Hospital, Montreal;and Co-Director o the NationalNetwork or Aboriginal MentalHealth Research. gailguthrie ValasKaKis wasDirector o Research, AboriginalHealing Foundation, Ottawa,and Co-Director o the NationalNetwork or Aboriginal MentalHealth Research.

    2008

    528 pages, 6.5 x 9.5978-0-7748-1523-9 hc$95.00978-0-7748-1524-6 pB$39.95

    tb cnnp 1: t Mn h inn p

    1 The Mental Health o Aboriginal Peoples in Canada:Transormations o Identity and Community / Laurence J.Kirmayer, Caroline L. Tait, and Cori Simpson

    2 Mental Health and the Indigenous Peoples o Australia andNew Zealand / Mason Durie, Helen Milroy, and Ernest Hunter

    3 Culture and Aboriginality in the Study o Mental Health /James B. Waldram

    4 Social Competence and Mental Health among AboriginalYouth: An Integrative Developmental Perspective / Grace

    Iarocci, Rhoda Root, and Jacob A. Burackp 2: s sn: on n rnn5 A Colonial Double-Bind: Social and Historical Contexts o Innu

    Mental Health / Colin Samson6 Placing Violence against First Nations Children: The Use

    o Space and Place to Construct the (In)credible ViolatedSubject / Jo-Anne Fiske

    7 Narratives o Hope and Despair in Downtown EastsideVancouver / Dara Culhane

    8 Suicide as a Way o Belonging: Causes and Consequences oCluster Suicides in Aboriginal Communities / Ronald Niezen

    9 Disruptions in Nature, Disruptions in Society: AboriginalPeoples o Canada and the Making o Fetal AlcoholSyndrome / Caroline L. Tait

    p 3: rn: tnmn in n cmmn

    10 Cultural Continuity as a Moderator o Suicide Risk amongCanadas First Nations / Michael J. Chandler and ChristopherE. Lalonde

    11 The Origins o Northern Aboriginal Social Pathologies and theQuebec Cree Healing Movement / Adrian Tanner

    12 Toward a Recuperation o Souls and Bodies: CommunityHealing and the Complex Interplay o Faith and History /

    Naomi Adelson13 Locating the Ecocentric Sel: Inuit Concepts o Mental Healthand Illness / Laurence J. Kirmayer, Christopher Fletcher, andRobert Watt

    14 Community Wellness and Social Action in the Canadian Arctic:Collective Agency as Subjective Well-Being / Michael J. Kraland Lori Idlout

    p 4: hn n Mn h sv

    15 Aboriginal Approaches to Counselling / Rod McCormick16 Respecting the Medicines: Narrating an Aboriginal Identity /

    Gregory M. Brass

    17 A Jurisdictional Tapestry and a Patchwork Quilt o Care:Aboriginal Health and Social Services in Montreal / Mary EllenMacdonald

    18 Six Nations Mental Health Services: A Model o Care orAboriginal Communities / Cornelia Wieman

    19 Encountering Proessional Psychology: Re-Envisioning MentalHealth Services or Native North America / Joseph P. Gone

    20 Conclusion: Healing / Invention / Tradition / Laurence J.Kirmayer, Gregory M. Brass, and Gail Guthrie Valaskakis

    Contributors; Index

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    First NatioNs studies Fnn dSel-Government, Social Suering, andAboriginal Policy in Canada

    sn ib-F

    stephaNie irlBacher-Fox

    holds a doctorate in polar studiesrom Cambridge Universityand or the past decade hasworked or Indigenous peopleson sel-government and relatedpolitical development processesin Canadas NorthwestTerritories.

    July 2009216 pages, 6 x 9978-0-7748-1624-3 hc$85.00978-0-7748-1625-0 pB$32.95(PB, January 2010)

    This book is an important contribution to the study

    o the relationship between the Dene and Canada.Dr. Irlbacher-Fox is non-Indigenous, and she hasspent most o her lie living and working in Denendehamong the Dene, Metis, and Inuvialuit peoples. Shehas listened to us using both her mind and her heart,which shows in the passion and conviction sheconveys in her research and writing. I welcome hercontribution to bringing to light aspects o both thestrength and the struggles o the Dene. From the Foreword by Bill Erasmus, Dene National

    Chie

    Finding Dahshaa draws on Stephanie Irlbacher-Foxsextensive hands-on negotiating experience, andormidable research and academic skills, to oerbadly needed analysis o past and current issuesimpeding progress on aboriginal sel-government inthe Mackenzie Valley. I recommend this book. Mary Simon, President, Inuit Tapiriit Kanatami

    tb cnn

    Pronunciation GuideForeword, by Bill Erasmus, Dene National ChiePreace; IntroductionChapter 1: Context and ConceptsChapter 2: Tanning Moose HideChapter 3: Dehcho Resource Revenue SharingChapter 4: Dln Child and Family ServicesChapter 5: Inuvialuit and Gwichin Culture and LanguageConclusion

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    First NatioNs studies t tk n B cmb, tenNegotiating a Mutually Benefcial Future

    e b c MK

    christopher McKee is a

    ormer political scientist at theUniversity o British Columbiaand currently Chairman o GaveaEmerging Markets Corporation.peter coleNBraNder joinedthe BC Treaty Commissionin 1995. From 2001 to 2008,he was the manager o theCommissions acilitation andmonitoring activities.

    pv annn

    December 2009224 pages, 6 x 9978-0-7748-1515-4 pB $29.95

    Praise or previous editions:

    Succinct, inormative, and easy to read. All o themajor issues that surround treaty negotiation arethoroughly presented and discussed in an unbiasedmanner. Erin Rettie, Saskatchewan Law Review

    A guide to the contemporary tripartite treaty-making process under way between those First

    Nations within the Province o British Columbia thathave chosen to enter the process and provincialgovernment o British Columbia and the ederalgovernment o Canada. David Reed Miller, Western Historical Quarterly

    This new edition includes a postscript, co-authoredwith Peter Colenbrander, that provides anoverview o the sometimes chequered history othe treaty process rom 2001 to 2009. It traces

    the achievements o and challenges or thetreaty process, reviews some o the most recentjurisprudence aecting Native and non-Native rights,and refects on the growing number o initiativesoutside the treaty process to achieve reconciliationbetween First Nations and the Crown.

    tb cnn

    Preace and AcknowledgmentsIntroduction1 Prelude to the Treaty-Making Process

    2 The Process o Treaty-Making3 The Issues to Be Negotiated4 The Treaty-Making Process Considered5 Treaty Implementation: Issues and Concerns6 The Treaty-Making Process, 1996-2000Refections and ReconsiderationsAppendicesA Recommendations o the British Columbia Claims Task

    Force, 1991B Aboriginal Groups Participating in Treaty Negotiations in

    British Columbia (as o May 1999)

    C Chronology o Events Contributing to the Treaty-MakingProcess in British Columbia

    NotesBibliographyIndex

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    First NatioNs studies cn pmCrossracial Encounters and Juridical Truthsin British Columbia, 1871-1921

    rn Mn

    reNisa MawaNi is an assistant

    proessor o sociology at theUniversity o British Columbia.

    May 2009288 pages, 6 x 9978-0-7748-1633-5 hc $85.00978-0-7748-1634-2 pB $32.95(PB, January 2010)

    LAW AND SOCIETY SERIES

    This book oers ascinating new perspectives on the

    roots o Canadian racism. Moving beyond traditionalnarratives o Aboriginal-European contact andChinese-European relations, Renisa Mawani probesthe unsettled landscape o crossracial encountersbetween Indians and Chinese in British Columbiahistory. She detly captures the renzied anxietiesthat whites harboured over ungovernable mixed-raceactivities, and brilliantly dissects the renewed stateracisms that were born o such encounters. Adele Perry, Canada Research Chair in Western

    Canadian Social History, University o Manitoba,and author o On the Edge o Empire

    Renisa Mawani is a rigorous researcher, a sharpanalyst, and a wide-ranging thinker. This is a powerulpiece o work, and scholars o colonialism and racemaking in British Columbia and settler colonies moregenerally will benet rom it. Constance Backhouse, Distinguished University

    Proessor and University Research Chair, Facultyo Law, University o Ottawa

    tb cnn

    List o Illustrations; Acknowledgments1 Introduction: Heterogeneity and Interraciality in British

    Columbias Colonial Contact Zone2 The Racial Impurities o Global Capitalism: The Politics

    o Labour, Interraciality, and Lawlessness in the SalmonCanneries

    3 (White) Slavery, Colonial Knowledges, and the Rise o

    State Racisms4 National Formations and Racial Selves: ChineseTrackers and Aboriginal Victims in British ColumbiasIllicit Liquor Trade

    5 The Most Disreputable Characters: Mixed-Bloods,Internal Enemies, and Imperial Futures

    Conclusion: Colonial Pasts, Entangled Presents, andPromising Futures

    Notes; Bibliography; Index

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    First NatioNs studies MkkA New History o Aboriginal-White Relations

    Jn sn l

    JohN suttoN lutz teaches in

    the Department o History at theUniversity o Victoria.

    2008460 pages, 8 x 10978-0-7748-1139-2 hc$85.00978-0-7748-1140-8 pB$34.95

    Selected, Outstanding Academic Title, CHOICE

    John Lutz traces Aboriginal Peoples involvement inthe new economy, and their displacement rom it,rom the arrival o the rst Europeans to the 1970s.Drawing on an extensive array o oral histories,manuscripts, newspaper accounts, biographies,and statistical analysis, Lutz shows that Aboriginalpeople focked to the workorce and prosperedin the late nineteenth century. He argues that theroots o todays widespread unemployment and

    welare dependency date only rom the 1950s,when deliberate and inadvertent policy choices what Lutz terms the white problem droveAboriginal People out o the capitalist, wage, andsubsistence economies, oering them welare ascompensation.

    Makk invites readers into a dialogue with thepast with visual imagery and an engaging narrativethat gives a voice to Aboriginal Peoples and other

    historical gures. It is a book or students, scholars,policymakers, and a wide public who care to bringthe spectres o the past into the light o the present.

    tb cnn

    Maps, Figures, TablesPreace: Makuk1 Introduction: Molasses Stick Legs2 Pomo Wawa: The Other Jargon3 Making the Lazy Indian4 The Lekwungen5 The Tsilhqotin6 Outside History: Labourers o the Aboriginal Province7 The White Problem8 Prestige to Welare: Remaking the Moditional Economy9 Conclusion: The Outer Edge o Probability, 1970-2007Postscript: Subordination without SubjugationAppendices; Notes; Bibliography; Acknowledgments;

    Credits

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    First NatioNs studies F Nn c h n lCase Studies, Voices, and Perspectives

    e b cn B n V Nn

    catheriNe Bell is a proessor

    o law at the University oAlberta. Val NapoleoNteaches in the Faculty o NativeStudies and the Faculty o Law atthe University o Alberta.

    2008304 pages, 6 x 9978-0-7748-1461-4 hc $85.00978-0-7748-1462-1 pB $34.95

    LAW AND SOCIETY SERIES

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    Preace: Respect or Elder Knowledge / Eric McLay and LeaJoe interviewing Arvid Charlie (Luschiim) & DorothyFirst Rider, in consultation with Frank Weasel Head

    Introduction, Methodology, and Thematic Overview /Catherine Bell and Val Napoleon

    p 1: o V, o c

    1 Recovering rom Colonization: Perspectives oCommunity Members on Protection and Repatriationo Kwakwakawakw Cultural Heritage / Catherine Bell,Heather Raven, and Heather McCuaig, in consultationwith Andrea Sanborn, the Umista Cultural Society, and

    the Namgis Nation2 The Law Is Opened: The Constitutional Role o Tangible

    and Intangible Property in Gitanyow / Richard Overstall,in consultation with Val Napoleon and Katie Ludwig

    3 Northwest Coast Adawx Study / Susan Marsden4 Alhut tu tet Sulhweentst [Respecting the Ancestors] :

    Understanding Hulquminum Heritage Laws andConcerns or the Protection o Archaeological Heritage/ Eric McLay, Kelly Bannister, Lea Joe, Brian Thom, andGeorge Nicholas

    5 Repatriation and Heritage Protection: Refections on the

    Kainai Experience / Catherine Bell, Graham Statt, andthe Mookakin Cultural Society

    6 Poomaksin: Skinnipiikani-Nitsiitapii Law, Transers, andMaking Relatives: Practices and Principles or CulturalProtection, Repatriation, Redress, and Heritage LawMaking with Canada / Brian Noble, in consultation withReg Crowshoe and in discussion with the Knut-sum-atakSociety

    7 Protection and Repatriation o Ktunaxa/Kinbasket CulturalResources: Perspectives o Community Members /Catherine Bell and Heather McCuaig, in consultation

    with the Ktunaxa/Kinbasket Tribal Council and theKtunaxa/Kinbasket Traditional Elders Working Group

    p 2: en Nn

    8 First Nations Cultural Heritage: A Selected Survey oIssues and Initiatives / Catherine Bell, Graham Statt,Michael Solowan, Allyson Jes, and Emily Snyder

    p 3: rn n s tm

    9 Canadian Aboriginal Languages and the Protection oCultural Heritage / Marianne Ignace and Ron Ignace

    10 Canadas Policy o Cultural Colonization: IndianResidential Schools and the Indian Act / Dale

    Cunningham, Allyson Jes, and Michael Solowan11 Owning as Belonging/Owning as Property: The Crisis

    o Power and Respect in First Nations HeritageTransactions with Canada / Brian Noble

    Concluding Thoughts and Unanswered Questions / ValNapoleon

    Appendix; Contributors; Index

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    First NatioNs studies pn F Nn chLaws, Policy, and Reorm

    e b cn B n rb K. pn

    catheriNe Bell is a proessor

    o law at the University oAlberta. roBert K. patersoNis a proessor o law at theUniversity o British Columbia.

    2008476 pages, 6 x 9978-0-7748-1463-8 hc $85.00978-0-7748-1464-5 pB $34.95

    LAW AND SOCIETY SERIES

    tb cnn

    Preace: Towards Reconciliation / Darlene JohnstonAcknowledgments; AbbreviationsIntroduction / Catherine Bell and Robert K. Patersonp 1: rn n t

    1 Restructuring the Relationship: Domestic Repatriationand Canadian Law Reorm / Catherine Bell

    2 International Movement o First Nations CulturalHeritage in Canadian Law / Catherine Bell and Robert K.Paterson

    3 The Protection and Repatriation o Indigenous Cultural

    Heritage in the United States / James Nazigerp 2: h s n an rmn4 Ancestral Remains in Institutional Collections: Proposals

    or Reorm / Robert K. Paterson5 Unsitely: The Eclectic Regimes that Protect Aboriginal

    Cultural Places in Canada / Bruce Zi and Melodie Hope6 Policies and Protocols or Archeological Sites and

    Associated Cultural Intellectual Property / George P.Nicholas

    p 3: innb h

    7 The Interconnection o Intellectual Property and Cultural

    Property (Traditional Knowledge) / Robert G. Howelland Roch Ripley8 First Nations Cultural Heritage Concerns: Prospects

    or Protection o Traditional Knowledge and TraditionalCultural Expressions in International Law / Rosemary J.Coombe

    9 Non-Legal Instruments or the Protection o IntangibleCultural Heritage: Key Roles or Ethical Codes andCommunity Protocols / Kelly Bannister

    p 4: hmn r n F Nn l

    10 Indigenous Cultural Heritage Rights in International

    Human Rights Law / Mohsen al Attar, Nicole Aylwin, andRosemary J. Coombe11 From Time Immemorial: The Recognition o Aboriginal

    Customary Law in Canada / Norman Zlotkin12 Looking beyond the Law: Questions about Indigenous

    Peoples Tangible and Intangible Property / Val NapoleonConcluding Thoughts and Fundamental Questions / Michael

    AschAppendix; Contributors; Index

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    First NatioNs studies lnn Nv FIndian Reserves and Fishing Rights in BritishColumbia, 1849-1925

    d c. h

    douglas c. harris is a

    member o the Faculty o Law atthe University o British Columbia

    2008268 pages, 6 x 9978-0-7748-1419-5 hc $85.00978-0-7748-1420-1pB $32.95

    LAW AND SOCIETY SERIES

    Landing Native Fisheriesreveals the contradictions

    and consequences o an Indian land policy premisedon access to sh, on one hand, and a program osheries management intended to open the resourceto newcomers, on the other. Beginning with the rsttreaties signed on Vancouver Island between 1850and 1854, Douglas Harris maps the connectionsbetween the colonial land policy and the lawgoverning the sheries. In so doing, Harris rewritesthe history o colonial dispossession in BritishColumbia, oering a new and nuanced examinationo the role o law in the consolidation o power withinthe colonial state.

    tb cnn

    Illustrations; Acknowledgments; Introduction1 Treaties, Reserves, and Fisheries Law2 Land Follows Fish3 Exclusive Fisheries4 Exclusive Fisheries and the Public Right to Fish5 Indian Reserves and Fisheries6 Constructing an Indian Food Fishery

    7 Licensing the Commercial Salmon Fishery8 Land and Fisheries DetachedConclusionAppendix; Notes; Bibliography; Index

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    First NatioNs studies lmn F NnThe Williams Treaties o Southern Ontario

    p B

    peggy J. Blair is one o

    Canadas leading lawyers in theeld o Aboriginal law.

    2008268 pages, 6 x 9978-0-7748-1512-3 hc $85.00978-0-7748-1513-0 pB $32.95

    LAW AND SOCIETY SERIES

    Peggy J. Blair, a lawyer specializing in aboriginal law,

    has produced an important study o the historicalcontext surrounding both the treaties and what shesees as a misguided response by the Canadiancourts.- Greg Marquis, University o New Brunswick,

    Law and Politics Book Review, Vol. 18, No.11,November 2008

    This book should prove a supportive work or trial

    lawyers working in the land claim eld.- Ronald F. MacIsaac, The Barrister, Issue No.89,September 2008

    In a 1994 decision known as Howard, the SupremeCourt o Canada held that the Aboriginal signatories tothe 1923 Williams Treaties had knowingly given up notonly their title to o-reserve lands but also their treatyrights to hunt and sh or ood.

    Peggy J. Blair gives the Howard decision considerable

    context. She examines ederal and provincial bickeringover special rights or Aboriginal peoples and noteshow Crown policies toward Indian rights changed assettlement pressures increased. Blair argues that theCanadian courts caused a serious injustice by applyingerroneous cultural assumptions in their interpretationo the evidence. In particular, they conused provincialgovernment policy, which has historically avouredpublic over special rights, with the understanding othe parties at the time. Blair demonstrates that when

    American courts applied the same legal principles astheir Canadian counterparts to a case involving similaracts, they reached the opposite conclusion.

    tb cnn

    Preace; Introductionp 1: h Bkn

    1 History o the Williams Treaties First Nations2 Imperial Crown Policy3 A New Crown Policy4 Jurisdictional Disputes

    5 Bureaucratic Obstaclesp 2: t wm t

    6 The Push or a New Treaty7 Diering Perceptions8 The Howard Case9 AnalysisConclusionAppendix: Relevant TreatiesNotes; Bibliography

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    First NatioNs studies hm i hnThe James Bay Cree and Their Land

    hn M. cn

    haNs M. carlsoN is teaching

    in the American Indian Studiesprogram at the University oMinnesota.

    2008360 pages, 6 x 9978-0-7748-1494-2 hc $85.00978-0-7748-1495-9 pB $34.95

    NATURE | HISTORY | SOCIETYSERIES

    Carlson does more than write the Cree into our

    narrative; he pens a Cree-centered narrative thatwrites newcomers into it, and it is this aspect oCarlsons book that is the most compelling ... HomeIs the Hunter is an excellent study o human andenvironmental relationships. ... Anyone with a minimalunderstanding o this place and these people shouldread this book, i only to see where their narratives tin with others and to gain a greater appreciation orthe history o the Cree and or the potential dangersto which we all contribute by pulling resources romthe periphery while at the same time imposing ouroutsider understandings over local ones. Jonathan Clapperton, University o Saskatchewan

    tb cnn

    Contents; Maps, Figures, and TablesForeword by Graeme WynnAcknowledgments1 Introduction: Why James Bay?2 Imagining the Land3 Inland Engagement4 Christians and Cree5 Marginal Existences6 Management and Moral Economy7 Flooding the Garden8 Conclusion: Journeys o Wellness, Walks o the HeartPostscript; Notes; Bibliography; Index

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    First NatioNs studies hn MnNative People and Wildlie Conservation inthe Northwest Territories

    Jn sn

    JohN saNdlos is an assistant

    proessor o history at MemorialUniversity o Newoundland.

    2007352 pages, 6 x 9978-0-7748-1362-4 hc$85.00978-0-7748-1363-1 pB$32.95

    NATURE | HISTORY | SOCIETYSERIES

    Winner, 2008 clio award For the North,

    Canadian Historical Association

    Winner, 2008 charles a. weyerhaeuseraward, Forest History Society

    As John Sadloss book shows, nothing inenvironmental politics is ever simple ... What beganas an attempt to preserve a species inevitably took onthe coloration o a social experiment. The book is ullo nuggets o interesting inormation.

    - William R. Morrison, Environmental HistoryJournal, Vol. 12, N0. 4, October 2007

    This hety text is a well-written and meticulouslyresearched academic work. Sandlos provideseloquent and exquisite details o the relationshipbetween human and animal ... It is certain to be ointerest to readers keen to better understand thepolitics o northern conservation in Canada, and the

    confict between Northern indigenous communitiesand Southern policy makers.- Ben Laurie, Alternatives, Vol.34, No.2, 2008

    Hunters at the Margin is well written, well produced,and a valuable contribution to the ongoing evaluationo the meanings o the North or those who livethere, those who are new arrivals, and those orwhom it looms large in imagination and expectation.- Henry P. Huntington, Arctic, September 2008

    tb cnn

    Maps, Tables, FiguresForeword: The Enigmatic North by Graeme WynnIntroduction: Wildlie and Canadian Historyp 1: Bn

    1 Making Space or Wood Bison2 Control on the Range3 Pastoral Dreamsp 2: Mk

    4 The Polar Ox

    p 3: cb5 La Foule! La Foule!6 To Save the Wild Caribou7 The Caribou CrisisConclusion; Appendix; Notes; Bibliography

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    First NatioNs studies Nn Vn, Nn BnnCanadian Art and Identities in the 1920s

    l dn

    leslie dawN is an associate

    proessor in the Departmento Art at the University oLethbridge.

    2006456 pages, 6 x 9978-0-7748-1217-7 pB$85.00978-0-7748-1218-4 pB$34.95

    Winner, 2008 rayMoNd KliBaNKsy prize, Aid to

    Scholarly Publications Programme (ASPP)

    I Fred HoussersA Canadian Art Movement wasthe most infuential Canadian art book o the 20thcentury, then National Visions, National Blindnessis the 21st centurys equivalent. Vast and complexin conception, Dawns work embodies primaryresearch o national signicance and shows the realoundations o Canadian art.

    Nancy Townshend, Alberta Views, May 2008

    This is a signicant book that seeks to revise (and,in so doing, renders problematic) long-standingconventions relating to the landscapes o the Groupo Seven and the construction o a modern Canadiannational identity in the early twentieth century.Dawn boldly brings out the inconsistencies andcontradictions at the heart o the new pictorial identityand, in particular, the inherent paradox in promoting

    landscapes empty o all people. The book is welldocumented and oers ascinating insight into therole o institutions and individuals, and the role oindividuals within institutions, as Canada sought toormulate and assert its specicity. Elegantly writtenand a pleasure to read, it will be o real interest to awide variety o readers. Christopher Role, University o Leicester, British

    Journal o Canadian Studies, Vol. 21.2, Autumn2008

    tb cnn

    AcknowledgmentsIntroduction1 Canadian Art in England2 England in Canadian Art3 Canadian Art in Paris4 Canadian Primitives in Paris5 Barbeau and Kihn with the Stoney in Alberta6 Barbeau and Kihn with the Gitxsan in British Columbia7 Giving Gitxsan Totem Poles a New Slant

    8 Representing and Repossessing the Skeena Valley9 West Coast Art, Native and Modern10 The Downall o Barbeau11 Revisiting CarrConclusionNotes; Bibliography; Illustration; Credits; Index

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    First NatioNs studies Bmn Nv n Fn lnSport, Visual Culture, and Identity inMontreal, 1840-85

    gn p

    gilliaN poulter is an

    associate proessor o Canadianhistory at Acadia University.

    May 2009390 pages, 6 x 9978-0-7748-1441-6 hc$85.00978-0-7748-1442-3 pB$32.95(PB, January 2010)

    This book, both innovative and provocative, will

    have a signicant impact on our understanding othe relationship between sport and national identityconstruction in Canada. It not only will add to thescholarly debate in the eld, it will help shape anddirect such debate in the uture. Colin D. Howell, author o Blood, Sweat, and

    Cheers: Sport and the Making o Modern Canada

    How did British colonists in Victorian Montreal cometo think o themselves as native Canadian? This

    incisive, richly illustrated work reveals that colonistsadopted Aboriginal and French Canadian activities hunting, lacrosse, snowshoeing, and tobogganing and appropriated them by imposing British ideologieso order, discipline, and air play. In the process, theyconstructed national attributes, or visual icons, thatwere recognized at home and abroad as distinctlyCanadian. The new Canadian nationality mimickedindigenous characteristics but, ultimately, rejectedindigenous players, and championed the interests

    o white, middle-class, Protestant males who usedtheir newly acquired identity to dominate the politicalrealm.

    Becoming Native in a Foreign Landdemonstratesthat English Canadian identity was not ormed solelyby emulating what was British, it gained enormousground by usurping what was indigenous in theertile landscape o a oreign land. It will appealto scholars and enthusiasts o Canadian history,

    identity, and culture.tb cnn

    List o Illustrations; Acknowledgments; Introduction1 Brave North Western Voyageurs: Snowshoeing in

    Montreal2 Men o the North: Canadian Sport Hunting3 The National Game o Canada: Lacrosse4 Our Winter Sports: The Montreal Winter Carnivals5 No Tin Soldiers: Canadas First WarConclusion

    Notes; Bibliography; Index

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    First NatioNs studies t rn lnSociety, Space, and Environment in Canadabeore Conederation

    c h

    cole harris is a proessor

    emeritus o geography at theUniversity o British Columbia.

    2008524 pages, 6 x 9978-0-7748-1449-2 hc$95.00978-0-7748-1450-8 pB$39.95

    Winner, 2008 K.d. sriVastaVa prize ForexcelleNce iN scholarly puBlishiNg, UBCPress

    Written by Canadas preeminent historicalgeographer, The Reluctant Land represents amilestone in pre-Conederation Canadian history. ColeHarris oers a sweeping history o the processesby which a string o European settler societies onthe margins o North America evolved to becomeCanada. This book is certain to become a classic.

    Margaret Conrad, co-author o Atlantic Canada: ARegion in the Makingand History o the CanadianPeoples

    Cole Harris oers a new and immensely importantinterpretation o early Canada. The subject matteris nothing less than the character o Canada. Thenarrative is exhilarating and the conclusions aresignicant. Gerald Friesen, author o The Canadian Prairies:

    A History and Citizens and Nation: An Essay onHistory, Communication, and Canada

    tb cnn

    Illustrations; Preace; Acknowledgments1 Lieworlds, circa 15002 The Northwestern Atlantic, 1497-16323 Acadia and Canada4 The Continental Interior, 1632-17505 Creating and Bounding British North America6 Newoundland

    7 The Maritimes8 Lower Canada9 Upper Canada10 The Northwestern Interior, 1760-187011 British Columbia12 Conederation and the Pattern o CanadaIndex

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    First NatioNs studies wn B cmb h,17841958

    c rm

    chad reiMer received

    his PhD in history rom YorkUniversity and works as anindependent historian and authorin Chilliwack, BC.

    August 2009224 pages, 6 x 9978-0-7748-1644-1 hc$85.00978-0-7748-1645-8 pB$29.95(PB, July 2010)

    This book homes in on the elisions and evasions that

    are at the core o some o the central problems acingBritish Columbian society today.-Coll Thrush, proessor, Department o History, UBC

    Captain James Cook rst made contact with thearea now known as British Columbia in 1778. Thecolonists who ollowed soon realized they needed awritten history, both to justiy their dispossession oAboriginal peoples and to ormulate an identity or anew settler society.

    Writing British Columbia Historytraces howEuro-Canadian historians took up this task, andstruggled with the newness o colonial society andoverlapping ties to the British Empire, the UnitedStates, and Canada. This exploration o the role ohistory writing in colonialism and nation building willappeal to anyone interested in the history o BritishColumbia, the Pacic Northwest, and history writingin Canada.

    tb cnn

    AcknowledgmentsIntroduction: The Challenge o British Columbia History1 The Earliest Pages o History2 Pioneers, Railways, and Civilization: The Late Nineteenth

    Century3 A Greater Britain on the Pacic: History in the Edwardian

    Age4 The Domain o History: Judge Frederic Howay5 A Proessional Past: The University o British Columbia

    and Walter Sage6 W. Kaye Lamb, Margaret Ormsby, and a First Generation

    o British Columbian HistoriansConclusionNotes; Bibliography o Primary Sources; Index

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    First NatioNs studies Bmn B cmbA Population History

    Jn d B

    JohN douglas Belshaw,ormerly proessor o history atThompson Rivers University, isnow Associate Vice-Presidento Education at North IslandCollege, Vancouver Island.

    January 2009300 pages, 6 x 9

    978-0-7748-1545-1 hc$85.00978-0-7748-1546-8 pB$32.95(PB, July 2009)

    Becoming British Columbiais the rst comprehensivedemographic history o the province. Investigatingcritical moments in the demographic record andlinking demographic patterns to larger social andpolitical questions, it shows how biology, politics,and history conspire with sex, death, and migrationto create a particular kind o society. John Belshawoverturns the widespread tendency to associatepopulation growth with progress by examining how

    the provinces Aboriginal population o as much ashal a million was reduced by disease to ewer than30,000 people in less than a century. He revealsthat the province has a long tradition o thinking andacting vigorously in ways meant to control and shapebiological communities o humans, and suggests thatimperialism, race, class, and gender have historicallysituated population issues at the centre o publicconsciousness in British Columbia.

    This absorbing work demysties demographics in anaccessible yet scholarly and provocative way. It willappeal to scholars and students in history, sociology,geography, and Canadian Studies, as well as togeneral readers interested in BC history.

    tb cnn

    List o Illustrations; Acknowledgments; Acronyms1 Cradle to Grave: An Introduction2 Weddings, Funerals, Anything: The British Columbian

    Demographic Narrative3 The West We Have Lost: First Nations Depopulation4 Girl Meets Boys: Sex Ratios and Nuptiality5 Ahead By A Century: Fertility6 Strangers in Paradise: Immigration and the Experience

    o Diversity7 The Mourning Ater: Mortality8 The British Columbia Clearances: Some ConclusionsAppendicesA Leading Settlements/Towns/Cities, BC, 1871-1951B Total Population, BC, 1867-2006C Age and Sex Distributions, BC, 1891-2001D Inant Mortality Rates, BC, 1922-2002Notes; Suggested Reading; Index

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    First NatioNs studies t gn emnLaw and Legal Culture in British SettlerSocieties

    e b hm F, Bnjmn l. B, n

    a. r. Bk

    haMar Foster is a proessoro law at the University oVictoria. BeNJaMiN l. Bergeris an assistant proessor o lawat the University o Victoria.a.r. BucK is a proessor o lawand Co-Director o the Centreor Comparative Law, Historyand Governance at MacquarieUniversity, Australia

    2008416 pages, 6 x 9978-0-7748-1491-1 hc $85.00978-0-7748-1492-8 pB $34.95

    LAW AND SOCIETY SERIES

    tb cnn

    Introduction: Does Law Matter? The New Colonial LegalHistory / Benjamin L. Berger, Hamar Foster, and A.R.Buck

    p 1: a Bn em

    1 Libel and the Colonial Administration o Justice in UpperCanada and New South Wales, c. 1825-30 / BarryWright

    2 The Limits o Despotic Government at Sea / BruceKercher

    3 One Chie, Two Chies, Red Chies, Blue Chies:Newcomer Perspectives on Indigenous Leadership inRuperts Land and the North-West Territories / JannaPromislow

    4 Rhetoric, Reason, and the Rule o Law in Early ColonialNew South Wales / Ian Holloway, Simon Bronitt, andJohn Williams

    5 Sometimes Persuasive Authority: Dominion Case Lawand English Judges, 1895-1970 / Jeremy Finn

    p 2: c n J n cn

    6 Courts, Communities, and Communication: The NovaScotia Supreme Court on Circuit, 1816-50 / Jim Phillipsand Philip Girard

    7 Fame and Inamy: Two Men o the Law in Colonial NewZealand / David V. Williams

    8 Moving in an Eccentric Orbit: The Independence oJudge Algernon Sidney Montagu in Van Diemens Land,1833-47 / Stean Petrow

    9 Not in Keeping with the Traditions o the CaribooCourts: Courts and Community Identity in NortheasternBritish Columbia, 1920-50 / Jonathan Swainger

    p 3: p, p, n pn n cn l

    10 Starkies Adventures in North America: The Emergenceo Libel Law / Lyndsay M. Campbell11 The Law o Dower in New South Wales and the United

    States: A Study in Comparative Legal History / A.R. Buckand Nancy E. Wright

    12 Contesting Prohibition and the Constitution in 1850sNew Brunswick / Greg Marquis

    13 From Humble Prayers to Legal Demands: The CowichanPetition o 1909 and the British Columbia Indian LandQuestion / Hamar Foster and Benjamin L. Berger

    Aterword: Looking rom the Past into the Future / John P.S.

    McLarenNotes; Selected Bibliography; Contributors; Index

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    First NatioNs studies Mkn wThe Genesis o Chinook Jargon

    g ln

    george laNg is Dean o Arts

    at the University o Ottawa andpresident o the Association desacults et tablissements delettres et de sciences humaines(AFELSH).

    2008216 pages, 6 x 9978-0-7748-1526-0 hc$85.00978-0-7748-1527-7 pB$29.95

    FIRST NATIONS LANGUAGES

    A two-edged sword o reconciliation and betrayal,

    Chinook Jargon (aka Wawa) arose at the interaceo Indian and White societies in the PacicNorthwest. Wawas sources lie rst in the languageo the Chinookans who lived along the lowerColumbia River, but also with the Nootkans o theouter coast o Vancouver Island. With the arrival othe ur trade, the French o the engags or voyageursprovided additional vocabulary and a set o viablecultural practices, a key element o which wasmarital bonding with Indian and mtissewomen.These women and their children were the rst fuentspeakers o Wawa.

    Ater several decades o contact, ensuing epidemicsbrought demographic collapse to the Chinookans.Within another decade the region was radicallytransormed by the Oregon Trail. Wawa had acquiredits present shape, but lost its homeland. It became adiaspora language in which many communities seeksome trace o their past. A previously unpublished

    glossary o Wawa circa 1825 is included as anappendix to this volume.

    Making Wawawill attract the attention o linguists,especially those involved in contact linguistics andthe languages o the Pacic Northwest. It will alsointerest historians and other scholars interested inNative and gender studies, cross-cultural confict,and transculturation.

    tb cnn

    AcknowledgmentsA Note on OrthographyIntroduction1 The Nootka Jargon2 Pidgin Chinook3 Approximations at Astoria4 The Hothouse o Fort Vancouver5 Waves o WawaConclusionAppendix Manuscript 195: A partially Annotated Early

    Glossary o Chinook Jargon

    Chronology; Notes; Reerences; Index

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    First NatioNs studies s n eIdentity and Modernization on Russias ArcticFrontier

    Nb tmn

    NioBe thoMpsoN is a

    documentary lmmaker, apartner in Clearwater Media,and a research associate atthe Canadian CircumpolarInstitute. He also teaches in theDepartment o Anthropology atthe University o Alberta.

    2008316 pages, 6 x 9978-0-7748-1467-6 hc$85.00978-0-7748-1468-3 pB$32.95

    Settlers on the Edge: Identity and Modernization

    on Russias Arctic Frontier is a description o thepolitical, social and psychological actors thataccompanied this revolution. It is also a ascinatinghistorical account o Soviet society, and o the chaoso the 1990s resulting rom the collapse o Sovietpower, as seen rom the most remote region o theSoviet Union ... This is an important story telling howa contemporary people dealt with events beyondtheir experience and control. Robert McGhee, Literary Review o Canada,

    Vol.16, No.10, December 2008

    Deeply researched and eloquently written, Settlerson the Edge shines light onto hitherto unexploredterritory in the literature o the Arctic, namely thetortured birth and mercurial ortunes o Russiaslarge arctic settler population. Thompson revealshow the orphan children o a grand Soviet project tocivilize the North wrought rom their post-Soviet

    misortunes a new sense o themselves. The picturethat emerges o a people o the arctic landscape makes an important and long-overdue contribution toour understanding o who belongs in the North. Farley Mowat

    tb cnn

    Illustrations; Preace; Acknowledgments1 Introductionp 1: t sv y, 1955-91

    2 Northern Settlement and the Late-Soviet State

    3 Arctic Idyll: Living in Soviet Chukotkap 2: tnn c, 1991-2000

    4 Idyll Destroyed5 Surviving without the Statep 3: rnn, 2001-5

    6 Modernization Again: The State Returns7 Two Solitudes8 Conclusion: Practices o Belonging9 AterwordAppendix 1: List o InormantsAppendix 2: Glossary o Russian Terms

    Notes; Reerences; Index

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    First NatioNs studies

    sn inncn dvmnCommunity-University Partnerships

    an r. pn n J B

    SupportingIndigenousChildrensDevelopmentdescribes a uniqueapproach tocurriculum ... thatcreates community-

    based, ace-to-acelearning to meet theneeds and interestso the community

    while advancing post-secondary educationcredentials. Judith L. Evans, UNICEF Consultant on

    Early Childhood Care and Development

    tb cnn

    Preace; Acknowledgments1 Turning the World Upside Down2 Harnessing the Potential o Partnership3 Co-Constructing Curriculum rom the

    Inside Out4 Sitting Backwards at Our Desks5 Grounding Learning in the Heart o

    Communities6 Transorming Knowledge through Trust and

    Respect7 Asserting the Power o Not Knowing

    8 Supporting Children and Families withSustained Community TransormationsReerences; Index

    2006, 152 pages, 6 x 9978-0-7748-1231-3 pB $32.95

    inn skEducating the Heart, Mind, Body,and Spirit

    J-ann ab

    [The] authorssel-refection onthe multiple rolesshe balanced asa researcher isappreciated, andher text servesas an excellent

    testimonial orthe ecacyand successeso researchers

    working collaboratively with indigenouscommunities.- M.A. Rinehart, Valdosta State University,

    Choice46

    Archibalds research studies how people,including hersel, live with their stories;moreover, how people can live wellwith their stories ... Here, stories are notmaterial or analysis; they are not olklorewith its implication o museum culture, andthey are certainly not data. Stories takeon their own lie and become teachers ....In her spiraling, iterative style, Archibaldgets as close as any book I have ound toa truly narrative pedagogy, as opposed to apedagogy o narrative.- Arthur W. Frank, University o Calgary,

    Canadian Journal o Sociology, Vol.33,No. 3

    tb cnn

    Preace1 The Journey Begins2 Coyote Searching or the Bone Needle3 Learning about Storywork rom Sto:lo Elders

    4 The Power o Stories or Educating the Heart5 Storywork in Action6 Storywork Pedagogy7 A Give-AwayNotes; Reerences; Index

    2008, 192 pages, 6 x 9978-0-7748-1402-7 pB $29.95

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    First NatioNs studies

    t c hnn ncn

    e b Jn Mn n d Mn

    tb cnn

    p 1: hnn n

    in

    1 Why I Hunt / LeighClarke2 Learning toHunt at the Age oTwenty-Seven: ANew Hunters Views

    on Hunting / Jason E.McCutcheon3 Hunting with Dad /Robert Sopuck

    4 Hunting Stories / Peter Kulchyski5 The Empires Eden: British Hunters, Travel

    Writing, and Imperialism in Nineteenth-Century Canada / Greg Gillespie

    6 Powers o Liveness: Reading HornadaysCamp-Fires / Mark Simpson

    p 2: hnn n cnvn n h

    7 Views o a Swampy-Cree Elder on theSpiritual Relationship between Hunters andAnimals / Louis Bird and Roland Bohr

    8 When the Need or It No Longer Existed:Declining Wildlie and Native Hunting Rightsin Ontario, 1791-1898 / David Calverley

    9 Contested Terrains o Space and Place:Hunting and the Landscape Known asAlgonquin Park, 1890-1950 / Jean L. Manore

    10 The Sinews o Their Lives: First NationsAccess to Resources in the Yukon,

    1890-1950 / Kenneth Coates11 The Canadian Wildlie Service: Enorcing

    Federal Wildlie Regulations / J. AlexanderBurnett

    p 3: hnn n cnm cn

    12 Aboriginal Peoples and Their Historic Right toHunt: A Reasonable Symbiotic Relationship /Bruce W. Hodgins

    13 Personal Expression as Exemplied byHunting: One Mans View / Edward Reid

    14 Gun Control in Canada / Simon Wallace

    15 A Hunters Perspective on Gun Control inCanada / Dale Miner

    16 The Activists Move West: RecentExperiences in Manitoba / Tim Sopuck

    17 Fair Chase: To Where Does It Lead? /Edward Hanna

    2006, 288 pages, 6 x 9978-0-7748-1294-8 pB $29.95

    d g ln?Local Knowledge, ColonialEncounters, and Social Imagination

    J cknk

    Winner, 2005 K.d.sriVastaVa

    prize For

    excelleNce

    iN scholarly

    puBlishiNg,UBC Press

    Winner, 2007clio award- NortherN

    regioN,Canadian HistoricalAssociation

    Winner, 2006 Victor turNer prize iNethNographic writiNg, Society orHumanistic Anthropology

    Winner, 2006 JuliaN steward award,American Anthropological Association

    tb cnn

    List o Illustrations; AcknowledgmentsIntroduction: The Stubborn Particularities o

    Voicep 1: M l

    1 Memories o the Little Ice Age2 Constructing Lie Stories: Glaciers as Social

    Spaces

    3 Listening or Dierent Storiesp 2: p en

    4 Two Centuries o Stories rom Lituya Bay:Nature, Culture, and La Prouse

    5 Bringing Icy Regions Home: John Muir inAlaska

    6 Edward James Glave, the Alsek, and theCongo

    p 3: snf r n snn p

    7 Mapping Boundaries: From Stories toBorders

    8 Melting Glaciers and Emerging HistoriesNotes; Bibliography; Index

    2005, 328 pages, 6 x 9978-0-7748-1187-3 pB $32.95

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    First NatioNs studies

    wn gmmPhonetics, Phonology, Morphology

    sn h

    tb cnn

    Authors note;Abbreviations;Acknowledgementsp 1: ln n

    1 Witsuwitenp 2: smn

    n n

    n

    2 Consonantcontrasts3 Consonantphonetics

    4 Vowel quality5 Vowel quantity6 Consonant and vowel classesp 3: M n n

    7 Nouns8 Postpositions9 Directional system10 Adjectives11 Numbers12 Overview o verb structure13 Verb roots14 Verb prex position classes15 Aspectual verb suxation16 Verb theme categories17 Infectionally deective verbs18 Phonological domainsp 4: smn n

    19 Syllables20 Stressp 5: pf

    22 First person plural subject prex23 Areal prexp 6: cnn

    25 Witsuwiten in comparative and theoreticalperspective

    an26 Historical phonology27 Writing systems or Witsuwiten-Babine28 Verb paradigms29 TextsReerences;Index

    2007, 850 pages, 6 x 9978-0-7748-1382-2 hc $150.00

    First Nations Languages Series

    Mqm rn gmm

    wn s

    tb cnn

    Preace ;Introduction1 Phonology2 Synopsis oMorphology3 Syntax (1): SimpleSentences4 Syntax (2) :Complex Sentences5 Syntax (3 ):Compound Sentences6 Syntax (4) :Negation7 Morphology o theRoot (1): The Verb

    8 Morphology o the Root (2): The Noun [to beredone]

    9 Morphology o the Root (3 ): Adjectives andAdjective-like Words

    10 Non-Personal Axes (1): Voice11 Non-Personal Axes (2): Aspectual and

    Modal Axes12 Non-Personal Axes (3 ): Derivational

    Axes13 Non-Personal Axes (4): Lexical Suxes14 The Person System15 The Demonstrative System16 Predicate Particles and Tags17 Interrogative Words18 Adverbs and Adverbial and Modal Words and

    Phrases19 Numerals20 Exclamations and Interjections21 Kinship Terms22 Space and Time23 Sample TextsAppendix 1. Index o Grammatical ElementsAppendix 2. Names o Places and PeoplesAppendix 3. A History o Work on HalkomelemBibliography; Index

    2004, 632 pages, 6 x 9978-0-7748-1002-9 hc$150.00

    First Nations Languages Series

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    First NatioNs studies

    wn i w sm i wnKkA Grammatical Analysis o SttimcOral Narratives

    e b l Mn

    Collected in thisbook are thepersonal liehistories o ouremale Sttimcelders. Theyrare among thelast remaining

    fuent speakerso Sttimcets, aseverely imperilledNorthern Interior

    Salish language, also known as Lillooet andspoken in the southwest interior o BritishColumbia. Their stories are presentedin the original Sttimcets as well as inEnglish translation. These texts are amongthe longest oral narratives o the Salishlanguage to be grammatically analyzed.They provide rst-hand accounts o whatit was like to be a emale child growing upin the 1930s and 40s both within Sttimccommunities and in residential schools.Important historical inormation is woveninto the stories about events in theLillooet area, the traditional Sttimc wayo lie, and the consequences o contactwith Western culture.

    tb cnn

    Acknowledgments1 inn

    Overview and goals; The Sttimc; The story-tellers; The Sttimc language; Methodology

    Orthographical issues; Morphological issues;Use o English in the stories;Idiolectalvariations; Related literature

    2 Beverley Franks story3 Gertrude Neds story

    4 Laura Thevarges story5 Rose Agnes Whitleys storyNotes; Reerences; Index

    2004, 528 pages, 6 x 9978-0-7748-1090-6 hc$125.00

    First Nations Languages Series

    t l lnPhonology, Morphology, Syntax

    Jn Vn ejk

    ... does an excellentjob o describingLillooet grammarin a compact,inormative, andintelligible manner;it should be readby anyone with

    an interest inthe languageso northwesternNorth America,

    and is also well worth perusal by linguistsspecializing in other areas .... this attractiveand well-produced volume is a valuableaddition to the literature on Salishlanguages. Anthropological Linguistics

    This book is the rst complete descriptivegrammar o Lillooet, an indigenousCanadian language spoken in BritishColumbia, now threatened with extinction.The author discusses three major aspectso the language sound system, wordstructure, and syntax in great detail. JanVan Eijk explains terms and procedures inorder to make the book accessible not only

    to the advanced linguist, but also to theundergraduate student with basic linguistictraining. Written with great clarity, andwell organized, the book is illustrated withcopious examples drawn rom many yearso eldwork in Sttimc territory.

    tb cnn

    Preace; Introduction; Symbols and abbreviationsp 1: pn c nm

    p 2: M c m

    n

    p 3: sn

    Comparison o Lillooet Orthographies; Bibliography

    1997, 300 pages, 6 x 9978-0-7748-0625-1 hc $125.00

    First Nations Languages Series

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    First NatioNs studies

    NnvRethinking Political Culture

    a hnn

    Ailsa HendersonsNunavut:RethinkingPolitical Cultureis an exemplarywork asking thequestion o howwell a population

    with set attitudesand behaviourscopes withhaving institutions

    oisted upon them over a short periodo time ... For those interested inthe political lie o Canadas Arcticpopulation, decentralisation, and theinterconnectedness o institutional designand political behavior, Ailsa Hendersons

    Nunavut: Rethinking Political Culture is aworthy addition to the bookshel.- Thomas J. Scotto, British Journal o

    Canadian Studies21, Autumn 2008

    tb cnnTables and Illustrations; Acknowledgments;

    Abbreviations1 Introduction2 Politics in Nunavut3 Inuit Political Culture

    4 Political Integration in the Eastern Arctic5 Institutional Design in the Eastern Arctic6 Consensus Politics7 Political Participation in Nunavut8 Ideological Diversity in Nunavut9 Transorming Political Culture in Nunavut10 Cultural Pluralism and Political CultureAppendix; Notes; Reerences; Index

    2007, 272 pages, 6 x 9978-0-7748-1424-9 pB $29.95

    Nvn NbmSel-Determination and the MikisewCree First Nation

    gb s

    Ms. Sloweypresents a highlythought-provokingtreatise on thedevelopment osel governanceor First Nationspeoples and it

    will certainly bea useul resourceor all aboriginalsin their search

    or a desirable and workable solution totheir demand or justice. Lawyers workingthrough the land claims process towardsindigenous governance will nd this to be avaluable text.- Ronald F. MacIsaac, Verdict118,

    September 2008

    What happens to a First Nation ater thesuccessul negotiation o a land claim?In Navigating Neoliberalism, GabrielleSlowey argues that neoliberalism, whichdrives government policy concerningFirst Nations in Canada, can also drivesel-determination. And in a globalizingworld, new opportunities or indigenous

    governance may transorm socioeconomicwell-being.

    tb cnn

    Figures; Acknowledgments; Introduction;Abbreviations

    1 Meeting Mikisew2 Neoliberalism Now3 Searching or Sel-Determination4 The Politics o Change5 The Economics o Change

    6 Transorming First Nations GovernanceNotes; Reerences; Index

    2007, 160 pages, 6 x 9978-0-7748-1406-5 pB $29.95

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    First NatioNs studies

    B g MnEssays on the Coast Salish

    e b B gnv M

    Be o Good Mindis a remarkablevolume ... Thetheoreticalengagement omany o the authorsmakes this bookimportant not only

    or those workingwith the CoastSalish, but oranthropologists

    wishing to critically engage withIndigenous groups in Canada and beyond. Kisha Supernant, University o British

    Columbia, Canadian Journal oArchaeology32, 2008

    tb cnnAcknowledgments; Introduction1 Coast Salish History2 The Not So Common3 We have to Take Care o Everything That

    Belongs to Us4 To Honour our Ancestors We Become Visible

    Again5 Toward an Indigenous Historiography:

    Events, Migrations, and the Formationo Post-Contact Coast Salish Collective

    Identities6 I can lit her up ...: Fred Ewens NarrativeComplexity

    7 Language Revival Programs o the NooksackTribe and the St:lo Nation

    8 St:lo Identity and the Cultural Landscape oSlh Tmxw

    9 Conceptions o Coast Salish warare,or Coast Salish Pacism Reconsidered:Archaeology, History, and Ethnography

    10 Consuming the Recent or Constructing the

    Ancient: The Role o Ethnography in CoastSalish Archaeological InterpretationContributors; Index

    2007, 320 pages, 6 x 9978-0-7748-1324-2 pB $32.95

    M n MmStories o Indigenous-EuropeanContact

    e b Jn sn l

    This convincingand solid collectionencouragesassessment andreassessment ocontact narratives.... Ten scholarsrom various elds,

    including history,anthropology,linguistics, andliterature, engage

    in this inormative work ... Lutzs extensiveinsight regarding native and newcomerrelations provides a solid basis or editorialexpertise o this compendium. Corinne George, Simon Fraser

    University, H-Canada

    tb cnn

    AcknowledgmentsIntroduction. Myth Understandings: First

    Contact, Over and Over Again1 Close Encounters o the First Kind2 First Contact as a Spiritual Perormance:

    Encounters on the North American WestCoast

    3 Refections on Indigenous History andMemory: Reconstructing and Reconsidering

    Contact4 Poking Fun? Humour and Power in KaskaContact Narratives

    5 Herbert Spencer, Paul Kane, and the Makingo The Chinook

    6 Perorming Paradox: Narrativity and the LostColony o Roanoke

    7 Stories at the Margins: Toward a MoreInclusive Historiography

    8 When the White Kawau Flies9 The Interpreter as Contact Point: Avoiding

    Collisions in Tlingit AmericaNotes; Bibliography; Contributors

    2007, 256 pages, 6 x 9978-0-7748-1263-4 pB $32.95

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    First NatioNs studies

    Kmj (tkn Bk)Game Management and InuitRights, 1950-70

    p Kk n Fnk Jm t

    Kulchyski andTester oera welcomere-analysis othe events andconsequencessurroundingCanadian policy

    and practice withregard to Inuit,particularly throughthe mechanism

    o game management. The book shouldstimulate discussion, reaction, and urtherresearch and interpretation o crucial eventsin Canadian and Arctic history ... They havetaken on a vast swath o northern history,immersed themselves in the available

    material, and emerged with a compellingaccount o how relations between amodern state and a hunting society werebungled with lasting consequences.- Henry P. Huntington, Arctic, March 2008

    tb cnn

    List o Illustrations; Preace; Introductionp 1: Mnn gm

    1 Trapping and Trading: The Regulation o Inuit

    Hunting Prior to World War II2 Sagluniit (Lies): Manuacturing a CaribouCrisis

    3 Sugsaunngittugulli (We Are Useless):Surveying the Animals

    4 Who Counts? Challenging Science and theLaw

    p 2: tkn Bk

    5 Inuit Rights and Government Policy6 Baker Lake, 1957: The Eskimo Council7 Inuit Petition or Their Rights

    Conclusion: Contested GroundNotes; Bibliography; Index

    2007, 304 pages, 6 x 9978-0-7748-1242-9 pB $32.95

    a F r emThe Lie o Juan Francisco de laBodega y Quadra

    Fmn M. tv

    This new study byFreeman Tovell,by reason o itsbroad coverage,meticulousresearch, andbalanced approach,will become an

    indispensable toolor any scholarinterested in thistopic ... Taken as a

    whole, Freeman Tovells work is a notableaddition to the history o British Columbia.- Roderick J. Barman, BC Studies

    tb cnn

    1 Beginnings

    p i: t e2 The 1775 Voyage on the Sonora3 Preparations or the 1779 Voyage4 The 1779 Voyage5 Away rom the North Pacicp ii: t cmmnn

    6 The Nootka Crisis and the Spanish Response7 The Administration o San Blas de Nayaritp iii: t dm

    8 The Nootka Convention and the Expeditiono the Limits

    9 Bodega at Nootka10 The Commissioners Negotiations at Nootka11 Leaving Nootka12 Results and Consequences o the Expedition

    o the Limits13 Endingsan

    A Bodegas Secret Instructions to Eliza or theReoccupation o Nootka

    B Revillagigedos Instructions to Bodega orthe Expedition o the Limits

    C History and Description o Bodegas Viaje: TheOcial Report o the Expedition o the LimitsD Biographical NotesE Rank Structure o the Spanish NavyGlossary; Chronology; Abbreviations; Notes;

    Bibliography; Index

    2008, 496 pages, 6 x 9978-0-7748-1367-9 pB $39.95

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    First NatioNs studies

    l r B dnAboriginal Title, the Calder Case,and the Future o Indigenous Rights

    e b hm F, h rvn,

    n Jm wbb

    tb cnn

    1 The CalderDecision, AboriginalTitle, Treaties, andthe Nisgaa / ChristinaGodlewska andJeremy Webberp 1: rn

    c

    pn

    2 Frank Calder andThomas Berger: AConversation3 Reminiscences o

    Aboriginal Rights at the Time o the CalderCase and Its Atermath / Honourable GrardV. La Forest

    p 2: h Bkn

    4 We Are Not OMearas Children: Law,Lawyers and the First Campaign orAboriginal Title in British Columbia, 190928/ Hamar Foster

    5 Then Fight or It: William Lewis Paul andAlaska Native Land Claims / Stephen Haycox

    p 3: c n i imn

    6 Calder and the Representation o IndigenousSociety in Canadian Jurisprudence / MichaelAsch

    7 What Are Aboriginal Rights? / Brian Slattery8 Judicial Approaches to Sel-Government

    since Calder: Searching or DoctrinalCoherence / Kent McNeil

    p 4: innn im

    9 Customary Rights and Crown Claims: Calderand Aboriginal Title in Aotearoa New Zealand/ David V. Williams

    10 The Infuence o Canadian and InternationalLaw on the Evolution o Australian AboriginalTitle / Garth Nettheim

    p 5: t F

    11 Let Obligations Be Done / John Borrows12 Closing Thoughts: Final Remarks rom Iona

    Campagnolo, Lance Finch, Joseph Gosnell,and Frank Calder

    Appendix

    2007, 352 pages, 6 x 9978-0-7748-1404-1 pB $32.95

    Law and Society Series

    N h oChanging Perspectives on CanadasNative Pasts

    e b t Bnnm n sn

    Nn

    tb cnn

    MapsIntroduction / TedBinnema and SusanNeylan1 Arthur J. Rayand the Writing oAboriginal History /Ted Binnema andSusan Neylan2 Ruperts Land,Nituskeenan, OurLand: Cree andEnglish Naming and

    Claiming around the Dirty Sea / Jennier S.H.Brown

    3 Echo o the Crane: Tracing Anishnawbek andMetis Title to Bawating (Sault Ste. Marie) /Victor P. Lytwyn

    4 Compact, Contract, Covenant: The Evolutiono Indian Treaty Making / J.R. Miller

    5 Smallpox along the Frontier o the PlainsBorderlands at the Turn o the TwentiethCentury / Jody Decker

    6 Mapping the New El Dorado: The FraserRiver Gold Rush and the Appropriation oNative Space / Daniel Marshall

    7 Innovation, Tradition, Colonialism, andAboriginal Fishing Conficts in the LowerFraser Canyon / Keith Thor Carlson

    8 Meanings o Mobility on the NorthwestCoast / Paige Raibmon

    9 Choose Your Flag: Perspectives on theTsimshian Migration rom Metlakatla, BritishColumbia, to New Metlakatla, Alaska, 1887 /Susan Neylan

    10 Gitxsan Law and Settler Disorder: TheSkeena Uprising o 1888 / R.M. Galois

    11 Arthur J. Ray and the Empirical Opportunity /Cole Harris

    Contributors; Index

    2007, 304 pages, 6 x 9978-0-7748-1413-3 pB $32.95

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    First NatioNs studies

    t F Nn Bcmb, 2n nAn Anthropological Survey

    rb J. Mk

    The First Nations oBritish Columbia,2nd edition,is a conciseand accessibleoverview o FirstNations peoples,cultures, and issuesin the province. Thisrevised edition: Updates

    names, suggestedreadings, maps, and photographs

    Explains the current treaty negotiation

    process Provides highlights of agreements

    between First Nations andgovernments up to the present

    Details past and present government

    policies Identies the territories of major groups

    in the province Gives information on populations,

    reserves, bands, and language groups Summarizes archaeological,

    ethnographic, historical, legal, andpolitical issues.

    tb cnn

    Maps and IllustrationsPreace to the First Edition; Preace to the

    Second Editionp 1: F Nn dfn

    p 2: a n F p

    p 3: en n tn l

    p 4: F Nn n rn n

    cnm tm

    Appendices1 The First Nations o British Columbia2 Major Ethnic Groups3 Excerpts rom the Royal Proclamation, 17634 Excerpts rom the Laurier Memorial, 19105 Highlights rom the Nisgaa Final Agreement6 First Nations Involved in Treaty Negotiations,

    2006

    2006, 168 pages, 6 x 9978-0-7748-1349-5 pB $19.95

    t emnA 19th-Century Ojibwa-CanadianFamily

    w. Bn s

    In about 1800,ur trader CharlesErmatinger marriedan Obijwa woman,Mananowe. Theirthree sons grewup with both theirmothers hunter/warrior cultureand their athersEuropean culture.As adults, theylived adventurously

    in Montreal and St Thomas, where theywere accepted and loved by ellow citizenswhile publicly retaining their Ojibwaheritage. The Ermatingersis an excitingstory that contributes to our understandingo Indian and European biculturalism andits eects on those who make up thevarious orms o Mtis society today.

    tb cnn

    Figures; AcknowledgmentsIntroduction1 The Urban Canadian Grandparents2 The Upper Country Ojibwa Grandparent3 Charles Srs Fur Trade Career4 Charles and Charlotte in Montreal5 A Wild Mans Land and a World o Virgil6 Farmer and Cavalry Man: Charles Jr7 Ojibwa Chie and Montreal Policeman:

    Charles Jr8 Soldier, Clerk, and a Last Adventure: James9 Dandy Turned Hero: William10 Suppressing Riots in Montreal: William11 Murder, Militia, and Military Intelligence:

    William12 The Ermatinger Women13 A Lost Past, a Future UnattainedAppendices; Notes; Bibliography; Index

    2007, 224 pages, 6 x 9978-0-7748-1234-4 pB $29.95

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    First NatioNs studies

    t av pUnearthing the Pasts o theChilcotin Plateau

    wm tk

    2007, 304 pages, 6 x 9978-0-7748-1377-8

    pB $32.95

    NATURE | HISTORY |SOCIETY

    cn Mn cnLiberalism and Land Resettlementin British Columbia

    Jm Mn

    2007, 256 pages, 6 x 9

    978-0-7748-1338-9

    pB $32.95

    NATURE | HISTORY |SOCIETY

    sbkArt, Ownership, and NuxalkNational Identity

    Jnn Km

    2006, 168 pages, 6 x 9978-0-7748-1228-3

    pB $29.95

    d dmnnProperty Rights in British SettlerSocieties

    Jn Mln, a.r. Bk, n Nn e.

    w

    2005, 326 pages, 6 x 9978-0-7748-1073-9

    pB $32.95

    LAW AND SOCIETYSERIES

    F Nn s s ncn c

    M l r

    2005, 248 pages, 6 x 9

    978-0-7748-1130-9

    pB $32.95

    LAW AND SOCIETY

    inn l tn

    e b l cmmn cn

    2007, 304 pages, 6 x 9978-0-7748-1371-6

    pB $29.95

    LEGAL DIMENSIONS

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    unn ennFirst Nations Imagery in the Art oEmily Carr

    g M

    2006, 400 pages,8 x 11 978-0-7748-1282-5

    hc $75.00

    t gFirst Nations Art in British Columbia,192261

    rn w. hk

    2002, 248 pages, 6 x 9

    978-0-7748-0955-9

    pB $32.95

    Nn ePhotographing and Filming theCanadian North, 192045

    p g

    2004, 280 pages, 6 x 9978-0-7748-0928-3

    pB $32.95

    cn znAboriginal and Settler Women inCanadas Colonial Past

    e b M r n K

    pk

    2005, 320 pages, 6 x 9978-0-7748-1136-1

    pB $32.95

    g innn gn aEmma Crosby and the MethodistMission on the Northwest Coast

    Jn h n Jn Bmn

    2006, 344 pages, 6 x 9978-0-7748-1271-9

    pB $29.95

    wmn n w Mn gGender and Race in the CanadianMission Field

    M r

    2003, 224 pages, 6 x 9978-0-7748-0905-4

    pB $32.95

    First NatioNs studies

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    First NatioNs studies

    sn BnAboriginal Identity, Pluralist Theory,and the Politics o Sel-Government

    tm s

    2003, 240 pages, 6 x 9978-0-7748-1047-0

    pB $29.95

    rmn inn Vn Vn

    M B

    2000, 314 pages, 6 x 9978-0-7748-0746-3

    pB $32.95

    ccF cnm n NnsknBattling Parish Priests, Bootleggers,and Fur Sharks

    dv Qn

    2004, 376 pages, 6 x 9978-0-7748-0939-9

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    in d rnn abn cn

    e b cn B n dv

    Kn

    2004, 392 pages, 6 x 9978-0-7748-1027-2

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    abn anm ndvmn n NnQb n lb

    e b cn s

    2001, 448 pages, 6 x 9978-0-7748-0845-3

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    abn cnnResearch As a Foundation or PublicPolicy

    e b J p. w, p s. Mm,

    n dn Bvn

    2003, 288 pages, 6 x 9978-0-7748-1022-7

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    First NatioNs studies

    B gnThe Canadian Military andAboriginal Lands

    p. wn lknb

    2006, 368 pages, 6 x 9978-0-7748-1316-7

    pB $29.95

    STUDIES IN CANADIANMILITARY HISTORY

    ann p a

    rb Mg

    2001, 244 pages, 6 x 9978-0-7748-0854-5

    pB $29.95

    h gHuman History and Environmentrom the Time o Loon to theTime o the Iron People

    e b d w. Fj n

    r w. M

    2005, 448 pages, 6 x 9978-0-7748-0922-1

    pB $35.95

    PACIFIC RIMARCHAEOLOGY

    t r Mn n wThe Image o the Indian and theSecond World War

    r. s sf

    2004, 240 pages, 6 x 9978-0-7748-1095-1

    pB $32.95

    Jn i aDiscovering an Ancient World

    p l. sk

    2004, 376 pages, 6 x 9978-0-7748-1029-6

    pB $29.95

    emn m MStudies in Northwest Coast CultureHistory

    e b Qnn Mk, g

    cn, n r.g. Mn

    2003, 336 pages, 6 x 9978-0-7748-0982-5

    pB $39.95

    PACIFIC RIMARCHAEOLOGY

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    Bn J n cnTreaty Making in British Columbia

    an w

    2005, 248 pages, 6 x 9978-0-7748-1132-3

    pB $32.95

    cmmn Mn h ncnPolicy, Theory, and Practice

    smn dv

    2006, 384 pages, 6 x 9978-0-7748-1281-8

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    pn w i snAgnes Alred, QwiqwasutinuxwNoblewoman

    e b Mn J. r n n

    b d s-sm

    2004, 325 pages, 6 x 9978-0-7748-0913-9

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    pn abn cn

    c wm

    2005, 192 pages, 6 x 9978-0-7748-1171-2

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    abn enFulflling the Promise

    e b Mn Bn cn,

    lnn dv, n l l

    2001, 296 pages, 6 x 9978-0-7748-0783-8

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    imnn dnLegend, Curse, and Spectacle in aCanadian Mining Town

    l a. rbn

    2004, 348 pages, 6 x 9978-0-7748-1093-7

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    First NatioNs studies

    hn-wnThe Heritage o the Circle

    g s

    1999, 280 pages, 6 x 9978-0-7748-0715-9

    pB $32.95

    gb BPatents, Plants, and IndigenousKnowledge

    ik Mbj

    2005, 336 pages, 6 x 9978-0-7748-1153-8

    pB $32.95

    pn tn F p B cmbIncluding Neighbouring Groups inWashington, Alberta and Alaska

    Nn J. tn

    1998, 255 pages, 6 x 9978-0-7748-0687-9

    pB $27.95

    RBCM HANDBOOKSSERIES

    F pn in Fp

    Nn J. tn

    1997, 224 pages, 6 x 9978-0-7748-0606-0

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    RBCM HANDBOOKSSERIES

    F pn c Fp

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    1995, 178 pages, 6 x 9978-0-7748-0533-9

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    RBCM HANDBOOKSSERIES

    Kn i lvnTraditions o Plant Use andCultivation on Northwest Coast oNorth America

    e b d d n

    Nn J. tn

    2005, 384 pages, 6 x 9978-0-7748-1267-2

    pB $29.95

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    First NatioNs studies

    Aboriginal Autonomy andDevelopment in NorthernQuebec and Labrador 38

    Aboriginal Conditions 38Aboriginal Education 40

    Agyeman, Julian 4Ancient People o theArctic 39

    Archibald, Jo-Ann 26Archive o Place 35Atleo, E. Richard 37At the Far Reaches o

    Empire 32

    Ball, Jessica 26Barman, Jean 36Battiste, Marie 38Battle Grounds 39

    Beavon, Dan 38Becoming British Columbia

    20Becoming Native in a

    Foreign Land 17Bell, Catherine 10, 11, 38Belshaw, John Douglas 20Be o Good Mind 31Berger, Benjamin L. 21Between Justice and

    Certainty 40Binnema, Ted 33Blair, Peggy 13Braiding Histories 22Buck, A.R. 21, 35

    Carlson, Hans M. 14Castellano, Marlene

    Brant 40CCF Colonialism in

    Northern Saskatchewan38

    Cole, Peter 4Colonial Proximities 8Colpitts, George 37

    Community Mental Healthin Canada 40Contact Zones 36Coupland, Gary 39Creating a Modern

    Countryside 35Cruikshank, Julie 27Culture o Hunting in

    Canada 27

    Daly, Richard 37Davis, Lynne 40Davis, Simon 40

    Dawn, Leslie 16Despotic Dominion 35Deur, Douglas 41Dion, Susan D. 22Do Glaciers Listen? 27

    Edmonds, Penelope 2Emerging rom the Mist 39Ermatingers 34

    Fedje, Daryl W. 39Finding Dahshaa 6

    First Nations, FirstThoughts 3

    First Nations CulturalHeritage and Law 10

    First Nations o British

    Columbia 34First Nations Sacred Sitesin Canadas Courts 35

    Food Plants o Coastal FirstPeoples 41

    Food Plants o Interior FirstPeoples 41

    Foster, Hamar 21, 33

    Game in the Garden 37Geller, Peter 36Global Biopiracy 41Good Intentions Gone

    Awry 36Grand Experiment 21

    Haida Gwaii 39Haig-Brown, Celia 37Haluza-DeLay, Randolph 4Hare, Jan 36Hargus, Sharon 28Harris, Cole 18Harris, Douglas C. 12Hawker, Ronald W. 36Healing Traditions 5Henderson, Ailsa 30

    Home Is the Hunter 14Hunters and Bureaucrats

    37Hunters at the Margin 15Huron-Wendat 41

    Imagining Dierence 40Indigenous Legal Traditions

    35Indigenous Storywork 26Intercultural Dispute

    Resolution in AboriginalContexts 38

    Irlbacher-Fox, Stephanie 6

    Johnson, Lauri 25Joshee, Reva 25Journey to the Ice Age 39

    Kahane, David 38Keeping It Living 41Kirmayer, Laurence J. 5Kiumajut (Talking Back) 32Kramer, Jennier 35Kulchyski, Peter 32Kuokkanen, Rauna 25

    Lackenbauer, P. Whitney39

    Lahache, Louise 40Lament or a First Nation

    13Landing Native Fisheries

    12Lang, George 23Law Commission o

    Canada 35

    Lawrence, Bonita 37Let Right Be Done 33Lillooet Language 29Lutz, John Sutton 9, 31

    Macdougall, Brenda 1

    Mackie, Quentin 39Making Wawa 23Makk 9Manore, Jean 27Mathewes, Rol W. 39Matson, R.G. 39Matthewson, Lisa 29Mawani, Renisa 8Maxim, Paul S. 38McGhee, Robert 39McKee, Christopher 7McLaren, John 35

    Mgbeoji, Ikechi 41Miller, Bruce Granville 31Miner, Dale 27Moray, Gerta 36Muckle, Robert J. 34Multicultural Education

    Policies in Canada andthe United States 25

    Murton, James 35Musqueam Reerence

    Grammar 28Myth and Memory 31

    Nadasdy, Paul 37Napoleon, Val 10National Visions, National

    Blindness 16Navigating Neoliberalism

    30New Histories or Old 33Neylan, Susan 33Nock, David A. 37Northern Exposures 36Nunavut 30

    One o the Family 1

    ORiley, Pat 4Our Box Was Full 37

    Paddling to Where IStand 40

    Paterson, Robert K. 11Pence, Alan R. 26Pickles, Katie 36Plant Technology o

    First Peoples o BritishColumbia 41

    Poulter, Gillian 17Protecting Aboriginal

    Children 40Protection o First Nations

    Cultural Heritage 11

    Quiring, David 38

    Raven, Heather 33Real Indians and Others

    37Reclaiming Indigenous

    Voice and Vision 38

    Red Mans on the Warpath39

    Reid, Martine J. 40Reimer, Chad 19Reluctant Land 18

    Reshaping the University25Robertson, Leslie A. 40Ross, Michael Lee 35Rutherdale, Myra 36

    Sandlos, John 15Schouls, Tim 38Scott, Colin 38Settlers on the Edge 24Sewid-Smith, Daisy 40Sheeld, R. Scott 39Shiting Boundaries 38

    Sioui, Georges 41Slowey, Gabrielle 30Speaking or Ourselves 4Stewart, W. Brian 34Storck, Peter L. 39Supporting Indigenous

    Childrens Development26

    Suttles, Wayne 28Switchbacks 35

    Tales o Ghosts 36Tester, Frank James 32

    Thompson, Niobe 24Timpson, Annis May 3Tovell, Freeman M. 32Treaty Talks in British

    Columbia 7Tsawalk 37Turkel, William 35Turner, Nancy J. 41

    Unsettling Encounters 36Urbanizing Frontiers 2

    Valaskakis, Gail Guthrie 5

    Van Eijk, Jan 29Walmsley, Chris 40Webber, Jeremy 33When I Was Small I Wan

    Kwikws 29White, Jerry P. 38With Good Intentions 37Witsuwiten Grammar 28Women and the White

    Mans God 36Woolord, Andrew 40Wright, Nancy E. 35

    Writing British ColumbiaHistory, 17841958 19

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