Human rights of aboriginal women in canada


Please read the attachment file Assignment instruction for instructions and detail description. Also, i have attached the file; Lecture slides for The industrial City and Policy responses; Please read it so that you can be more familiar with the topic.

Annotated Bibliography:

For this assignment, you are required to find 5 sources related to the topic of  “The Industrial City and Policy Responses” for example what were the major transformative aspects of the industrial revolution? In what ways was municipal infrastructure building a transformative change in industrial cities? What were the key early arguments for city planning…etc

Use RefWorks, Zotero, EndNote (or something similar) to generate an annotated bibliography in APA format that consists of 5 entries. Your entries MUST include one of each of the following:

–    a full book
–    a chapter from an edited book
–    a peer–reviewed journal article
–    a website (e.g. government, research institute etc.)
–    a newspaper article

An annotated bibliography gives an account of the research that has been done on a given topic. Like any bibliography, an annotated bibliography is an alphabetical list of research sources. In addition to bibliographic data, an annotated bibliography provides a concise summary of each source and some assessment of its value or relevance. Please provide a summary of each source.

Below the bibliographic information provide a brief description of each source. In your own words, explain in a couple of sentences the main arguments or salient points of each article. You should assess the value and significance of the source and, where appropriate, its usefulness for your forthcoming final paper. If a quotation is particularly valuable, you may include it in your summary, attributing page numbers as appropriate.

Example of Annotated Bibliography:

Example: Only lists contents:

McIvor, S. D. (1995). Aboriginal women’s rights as “existing rights.” Canadian Woman Studies/Les Cahiers de la Femme 2/3, 34-38.

This article discusses recent constitutional legislation as it affects the human rights of aboriginal women in Canada: the Constitution Act (1982), its amendment in 1983, and amendments to the Indian Act (1985). It also discusses the implications for aboriginal women of the Supreme Court of Canada’s interpretation of the Constitution Act in R. v. Sparrow (1991).

Example: Identifies the argument:

McIvor, S. D. (1995). Aboriginal women’s rights as “existing rights.” Canadian Woman Studies/Les Cahiers de la Femme 2/3, 34-38.

This article seeks to define the extent of the civil and political rights returned to aboriginal women in the Constitution Act (1982), in its amendment in 1983, and in amendments to the Indian Act (1985).* This legislation reverses prior laws that denied Indian status to aboriginal women who married non-aboriginal men. On the basis of the Supreme Court of Canada’s interpretation of the Constitution Act in R. v. Sparrow (1991), McIvor argues that the Act recognizes fundamental human rights and existing aboriginal rights, granting to aboriginal women full participation in the aboriginal right to self government.

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Business Law and Ethics: Human rights of aboriginal women in canada
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