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008180112s2000    onc    #ob   f000 0 eng d
040 |aCaOODSP|beng
043 |an-cn---
0861 |aR5-639/2000E-PDF
1001 |aAbel, Kerry M. |q(Kerry Margaret)
24510|aNative policy since 1945 |h[electronic resource] / |cKerry Abel and John F. Leslie.
260 |a[Ottawa?] : |b[Indian and Northern Affairs Canada?], |c[2000?]
300 |a33 p.
500 |aTitle from caption.
500 |aDigitized edition from print [produced by Indigenous and Northern Affairs Canada].
504 |aIncludes bibliographical references.
520 |a"In 1943, the Native Brotherhood of British Columbia sent Andrew Paull (Squamish leader and a founder of the Allied Tribes of British Columbia) and Dan Assu (a Kwakiutl from the coast) to Ottawa to protest against taxes that were being levied on aboriginal fishers in BC. Within a few months, their mission had prompted ever-expanding circles of interest, drawing in aboriginal leaders from across the country determined to unite to force the government to address their many grievances. Their actions marked the beginning of the first significant change in Canadian Native policy since confederation"--Introduction, p. 1.
69207|2gccst|aAboriginal affairs
69207|2gccst|aGovernment policy
69207|2gccst|aCanadian history
7001 |aLeslie, John F. |q(John Franklin), |d1945-
7101 |aCanada. |bIndian and Northern Affairs Canada.
85640|qPDF|s1.22 MB|uhttps://publications.gc.ca/collections/collection_2018/aanc-inac/R5-639-2000-eng.pdf