University of Minnesota Human Rights Library – The Rights of Indigenous Peoples
http://hrlibrary.umn.edu/edumat/studyguides/indigenous.html
From 2003, a comprehensive set of documents about the rights of Indigenous Peoples on a global scale. It includes commonly used terms, what rights are at stake, and legal instruments granting international protection. In includes drafts of Human Right Declarations dating back to 1948, and many other resources.
Windspeaker (online newspaper)
A grassroots source, published biweekly by the “Aboriginal Multi-Media Society (AMMS) and is ‘Canada’s most widely circulated Indigenous news publication’. In addition to current content, 24,000 articles dating back to 1983 are available in the online Windspeaker Archive Search.” (Dalhousie University Library review). In 1993 it Windspeaker became a national Indigenous newspaper.
Dalhousie University Libraries – Indigenous News and Media
http://dal.ca.libguides.com/c.php?g=576634&p=4205601
Speaking of Dalhousie, their library site contains many, many excellent news and media resources for their Indigenous Studies program. This is where I found the endorsement of Windspeaker above; as we learned from this course, many people actually impersonate Indigenous Peoples so checking resources thoroughly to ensure an Indigenous person’s voice is what is actually being presented is vital when doing Indigenous research.
Ku’ku’kwes News
Another one I found that also turned up on the Dalhousie Indigenous Studies resource site. This is a local independent online newspaper from Atlantic Canada. It divides the news by the four geographic provinces to include local news, although there is overlap when national events are covered. There is also a news podcast series of 15 episodes from 2017.
Aboriginal Multi-Media Society
Seems to be out of date, but curated news from across Canada by province. Its current iteration is Windspeaker. Photos are included from celebrations, gatherings and protest events between 2011-2016.