Re-inventing Canada : the North and national policy / by Peter Jull.: Z1-1991/1-41-123E-PDF
“Indigenous peoples in Northern Canada have faced many hardships and dislocations. In the Territorial North, however, Canada has made great progress since World War II. Comparison with Australia highlights key elements of Canada's Northern achievement. This paper reflects on the course and conflicts of the post-war North in Canada. It describes a synthesis which has been arrived at by trial and error in public policy and the angry reactions of indigenous peoples to policies made by others"--Executive summary, p. 2.
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publications.gc.ca/pub?id=9.829845&sl=0
Department/Agency | Canada. Privy Council Office. Canada. Royal Commission on Aboriginal Peoples. |
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Title | Re-inventing Canada : the North and national policy / by Peter Jull. |
Variant title | North and national policy |
Publication type | Monograph |
Language | [English] |
Format | Electronic |
Electronic document | |
Note(s) | Cover title. "February 7, 1995." "An essay commissioned by the Royal Commission on Aboriginal Peoples, Ottawa, Canada." Historical publication digitized by the Privy Council Office of Canada. Includes bibliographical references. |
Publishing information | [Ottawa] : Royal Commission on Aboriginal Peoples, [1995] |
Author / Contributor | Jull, Peter. |
Description | 76 p. |
Catalogue number |
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Edition | Rev. 3rd ed. |
Subject terms | Commissions of inquiry Aboriginal peoples Northern Canada Government policy |