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Notice d'autorité

Qu'Appelle Valley Indian Development Authority

  • Collectivité
  • 1979

Qu’Appelle Valley Indian Development Authority that was formed in 1979 to seek compensation for eight First Nations in the Qu'Appelle Valley in southern Saskatchewan following creation of water control structures in the early 1940s that caused flooding and damage.

Kaska Dena Council

  • Collectivité

While Kaska Dena view themselves as one Nation, due to borders that were imposed by Canada, the Kaska Nation is a transboundary Nation, with traditional territory in British Columbia, Yukon, and Northwest Territories.
The Kaska Nation was further divided by Canada into four Indian Act bands: Ross River Dena Council in Yukon, Liard First Nation in Yukon/BC, and Dease River First Nation and Kwadacha First Nation in British Columbia. As the Yukon/BC border divides the Liard First Nation, the Liard #3 Reserve at Lower Post in BC has its own election process to elect a Deputy Chief and council members for its own Council – Daylu Dena Council.
The Kaska Nation is represented in negotiation of agreements by three bodies: the Kaska Dena Council representing Kaska Dena Council members (Dease River First Nation, Kwadacha Nation, Dayla Dena Council) ; the Liard First Nation; and the Ross River Dena Council (Dease River First Nation, Kwadacha Nation, Dayla Dena Council).

The Kaska Dena Council is structured with Kaska Leadership from the Daylu Dena Council, Dease River First Nation, and Kwadacha First Nation as Directors of the Council with three elected executives: Chairperson, Vice-Chair of Lands and Resources and Vice-Chair of Finance. It also includes Directors representing Fireside, Muncho, and the hereditary leadership system. The Kaska Dena Council office is located in Lower Post on the Liard River Indian Reserve #3 in Northern British Columbia.

PwC

  • Collectivité

Morel, Gaëlle

  • Personne

Dr. Gaëlle Morel is Exhibitions Curator at the Ryerson Image Centre (Toronto). She received her PhD in the History of Contemporary Photography from Université Paris 1 Panthéon-Sorbonne.

In 2009, Dr. Morel served as the guest curator of the Mois de la Photo in Montreal on the theme of The Spaces of the Image and edited the accompanying catalogue. In 2012, Dr. Morel curated the Berenice Abbott exhibition at the Jeu de Paume in Paris and the Art Gallery of Ontario in Toronto, as well as edited the accompanying publication. Most recently, she curated of Robert Burley: The Disappearance of Darkness, an exhibition produced by the Ryerson Image Centre which toured to the National Gallery of Canada and the Nicéphore-Niépce Museum in Chalon-sur-Saône, France.

She has also taught the history of contemporary art and the history of photography at the university level in both France and Canada. She co-teaches the Exhibition and Publication of Photographs course in the Film + Photography Preservation Collections Management Master’s program at the School of Image Arts, Ryerson University.

Her research deals with the artistic and cultural recognition of photography from the 1970s, and photographic modernism in the 1930s. She has written essays that have appeared in a number of magazines and books.

taken from: https://www.ryerson.ca/graduate/ppcm/faculty/bio/gaelle-morel/ (accessed October 2019)

Skwxwú7mesh Úxwumixw

  • Collectivité

Skwxwu7mesh Uxwumixw is an independent nation but once was under the umbrella of the Alliance Tribal Council (Naut'sa mawt Tribal Council).

Nunatsiavut Government

  • Collectivité
  • 1973-

In 1973, the Labrador Inuit Association (LIA) was formed to promote Inuit health and communities, and advance Labrador Inuit claims with Canada and Newfoundland. It was officially recognized on March 26, 1975. On December 1, 2005, the LIA transitioned into the Nunatsiavut Government, after the 2004 ratification of the Labrador Inuit Land Claims Agreement. With direct control over 15,799 square kilometres of Labrador Inuit Lands, and significant rights and influence throughout the larger Labrador Inuit Settlement Area, the Nunatsiavut Government has preserved and promoted the close connection that its beneficiaries have with the land and sea, while continuing to make strategic decisions to improve the lives of all its beneficiaries.

Society for Threatened Peoples

  • Collectivité

The Society for Threatened Peoples (STP) is an international human rights organization that advocates for threatened ethnic and religious minorities, nationalities and indigenous communities

Department of Consumer and Corporate Affairs (Canada)

  • Collectivité
  • 1967-1993

The Department of Consumer and Corporate Affairs was established in 1967 to bring together under one minister the administering of federal policies regulating the marketplace. Its responsibilities included consumer affairs; corporations and corporate securities; combines, mergers, monopolies and restraint of trade; bankruptcy and insolvency; patents, copyrights, trademarks and industrial design; and programs designed to promote the interests of Canadian consumers. The minister, as registrar general of Canada, was the custodian of the Great Seal of Canada, Privy Seal of the governor general and the seals of the administrator and registrar general of Canada. The department's Bureau of Competition Policy included the Restrictive Trade Practices Commission; the Bureau of Consumer Affairs was concerned with the fair treatment of consumers in the marketplace; the Bureau of Corporate Affairs regulated much of the legal framework in which business operates. In 1993 the department was dismantled in a structural overhaul of the government and its responsibilities delegated to other departments.

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