Browse
Recent Submissions
Item Open Access Arctic Innovation(2014-01-01) Coates, Ken; Poelzer, GregArctic Innovation, The Uarctic Magazine, Shared Voices, 2014, pages 14-15Item Open Access Future Directions in Research in Inuit Education(2013-02) National Centre for Inuit EducationA Report Prepared from the Proceedings of the 1st Forum on Research in Inuit EducationItem Open Access Building Self-Sufficiency…Together: Establishing a Saskatchewan First Nations Economic Development Network(2012-07) Saskatchewan First Nations Economic Development ForumItem Open Access Northern Voices: A Look Inside Political Attitudes and Behaviours in Northern Saskatchewan(2013-01-01) Beatty, Bonita; Doraty, Kelton; Kocdag, Meritt; Waldbilling, Sara; Carriere, Dana; Berdahl, Loleen; Poelzer, GregNorthern Aboriginal Political Culture StudyItem Open Access Lessons Learned: Achieving Positive Educational Outcomes in Northern Communities(2012-02) Sisco, Ashley; Caron-Vuotari, Margaret; Stonebridge, Carole; Sutherland, Greg; Rhéaume, GillesThe Conference Board of CanadaItem Open Access Canadian Arctic Shipping: Issues and Perspectives(2011-11) Lajeunesse, Adam; Russell, Will; Johnston, A.E.Occasional Paper Series, Volume 11-01, November 2011Item Open Access Guidelines for Establishing a Northern Greenhouse Project(2012-11-08) Exner-Pirot, HeatherItem Open Access Canadian Leadership in the Circumpolar World: An Agenda for the Arctic Council Chairmanship, 2013-2015(2011-04-01) Exner-Pirot, HeatherThe Arctic is a region of increasing global-interest. Canadian interests in the region - economic, political, social, and environmental - would benefit from the development of an effective governance framework for the Arctic in terms of providing for stable, predictable, and sustainable use of the area's resources in a manner that benefits northern inhabitants. Canada has an opportunity to influence the Arctic policy agenda and promote Canada's interests as in 2013 it assumes the chairmanship of the Arctic Council, the high-level intergovernmental forum that discusses common circumpolar policy. This article outlines the issue areas most likely to benefit from regional co-operation, and which Canada should promote in the lead up to and during its chairmanship: Search and rescue, fisheries management, shipping regulartions, and a regional seas agreement. The article argues that Canada should lead governance reform in the Arctic both because it is in Canada's interests to do so, and because Canada is uniquely placed to do so within the Circumpolar World. The Northern Review, Number 33, Spring 2011Item Open Access NMTA Needs Assessment: Building Administrative Capacity in Northern Saskatchewan's Municipalities(2011-03) Buhr, Nola; Garcea, Joe; Poelzer, GregNMTA (Northern Management Trust Account)Item Open Access What Crisis? Global Lessons from Norway for Managing Energy-Based Economies(2015-02) Poelzer, GregA Macdonald-Laurier Institute Publication, True North in Canadian Public Policy, Commentary, February 2015Item Open Access On the Front Lines of Canada's Northern Strategy(2010-07) Coates, Ken; Poelzer, GregFederation of Canadian MunicipalitiesItem Open Access Northern Indigenous Peoples & The Prospects for Nuclear Energy(2016-06) Coates, Ken; Landrie-Parker, DazawrayItem Open Access Knowledge Synthesis: Aboriginal Workplae Integration in the North(2015-11) Hall, Heather; Hesseln, Hayley; Coates, KenItem Open Access Unearthing Human Resources: Aboriginal Skills Development and Employment in the Natural Resource Sector(2015-12) Coates, Ken; Finnegan, Greg; Hall, Craig; Lendsay, KellyA Macdonald-Laurier Institute Publication, True North in Canadian Public Policy, Aboriginal Canada and the Natural Resource Economy Series, Number 8, December 2015Item Open Access Sharing the Wealth: How resource revenue agreements can honour treaties, improve communities, and facilitate Canadian development(2015-01) Coates, KenA Macdonald-Laurier Institute Publication, True North in Canadian Public Policy, Aboriginal Canada and the Natural Resource Economy Series, Number 6, January 2015Item Open Access Understanding Undrip: Choosing action on priorities over sweeping claims about the United Nations Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples(2016-05) Favel, Blaine; Coates, Ken S.A Macdonald-Laurier Institute Publication, True North in Canadian Public Policy, Aboriginal Canada and the Natural Resource Economy Series, Number 10, May 2016Item Open Access The Role of the Public Sector in Northern Governance(2014-01-01) Coates, Ken; Poelzer, Greg; Exner-Pirot, Heather; Garcea, Joe; Rodon, Thierry; Schiff, Rebecca; White, Graham; Wilson, GaryThe Conference Board of CanadaItem Open Access The Uarctic Magazine, Shared Voices, 2014(2014-05-01) Coates, KenThe Uarctic Magazine, Shared Voices, 2014Item Open Access Aboriginal Politics: More Than Voting(2014-01-01) Poelzer, Greg; Beatty, Bonita; Berdahl, LoleenReport; Policy Options; If Canada and Aboriginal people are going to find a common political path to dealing with conflict, the myth of the politically disengaged Aboriginal citizen needs to be expunged...Pour que le Canada et les peuples autochtones puissent un jour convenir d'une approche de règlement des conflits, il faudra d'abord en finir avec le mythe du citoyen autochtone politiquement désengagé. Policy Options/Options Politiques, September-October/Septembre-Octobre 2014, pages 64-66Item Open Access A Work in Progress: Completing the Devolution Revolution in Canada's North(2014-04) Coates, Ken; Poelzer, GregIf Canada and Aboriginal people are going to find a common political path to dealing with conflict, the myth of the politically disengaged Aboriginal citizen needs to be expunged...Pour que le Canada et les peuples autochtones puissent un jour convenir d'une approche de règlement des conflits, il faudra d'abord en finir avec le mythe du citoyen autochtone politiquement désengagé. A Macdonald-Laurier Institute Publication, True North in Canadian Public Policy, April 2014