000 01724cam  2200301za 4500
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003CaOODSP
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008180124s1975    onc    #o    f000 0 eng d
040 |aCaOODSP|beng
043 |an-cn---
0861 |aR34-1/2E-PDF|zR34-1/2
24500|aHistory of Indian policy |h[electronic resource] / |cprepared by Indian and Northern Affairs Canada, Policy Planning and Research.
260 |aOttawa : |bIndian and Eskimo Affairs, Policy Planning and Research, |cc1975.
300 |a[5] p.
4901 |aBackground paper ; |v2
500 |aTitle from cover.
500 |aDigitized edition from print [produced by Indigenous and Northern Affairs Canada].
520 |a"In spite of differences in specific aspects of Indian policy, all the European powers who colonized the Americas shared one basic assumption: the aboriginal inhabitants of the land were subjects of the heads of the colonizing states. This assumption has remained to this day the basis of Indian policy in North America. Whatever the peculiar regional or chronological conditions, or the attitudes of the natives themselves, Indian people were not, and still are not, considered to be sovereign peoples"--Responsibility for a people, p. [1].
69207|2gccst|aAboriginal peoples
69207|2gccst|aGovernment policy
69207|2gccst|aHistory
7101 |aCanada.|bIndian and Northern Affairs. |bStrategic Planning, Policy and Research Branch.
7102 |aIndian and Eskimo Affairs Program (Canada)
830#0|aBackground paper ;|v2.|w(CaOODSP)9.854923
85640|qPDF|s511 KB|uhttps://publications.gc.ca/collections/collection_2018/aanc-inac/R34-1-2-eng.pdf