University of Saskatchewan and ITK sign agreement to ensure Inuit benefit from opportunities reserved for Inuit
University of Saskatchewan and ITK sign agreement to ensure Inuit benefit from opportunities reserved for Inuit
The University of Saskatchewan (USask) and Inuit Tapiriit Kanatami (ITK) are partnering to prevent the harmful appropriation of Inuit identity and ensure that individuals who benefit from opportunities at USask based on Inuit identity are Inuit.
Inuk artist Elisapie is one of three Indigenous leaders who will be celebrated on National Indigenous Peoples Day with the launch of new postage stamps.
“We are now living in an era where there are tremendous opportunities to be had for qualifying as a First Nations, Inuit and Métis business,” ITK President Natan Obed told The Globe and Mail. “There are many actors in this country who want to take advantage of that.”
“It’s an old way of colonial interactions between the nation-state and Indigenous Peoples, and it’s unfortunate what we were powerless to stop it.” — ITK President Natan Obed
Years of unexplained delays and systemic failures allowed disgraced Priest Johannes Rivoire to flee to France in 1993 and avoid facing justice for crimes against Inuit children. His death means he never will.
New National Defence Policy focuses on security and readiness within Inuit Nunangat
Catholic Oblates releases report on how people and systems failed Inuit victims of abuse by Johannes Rivoire
Inuit Tapiriit Kanatami is seeking $131.6 million over seven years — and a show of commitment toward tuberculosis elimination — from next month’s federal budget
A year’s worth of bragging rights will be on the line Sunday when Inuit Tapiriit Kanatami faces off against reigning champion Métis National Council in the second annual Tea and Bannock Cup hockey game in Ottawa.
Linkages between ITK priorities and the UN’s Sustainable Development Goals
ITK President says Inuit are ready to implement child welfare legislation