By ahnationtalk on August 12, 2022
By ahnationtalk on August 12, 2022
By ahnationtalk on August 12, 2022
By ahnationtalk on August 12, 2022
By ahnationtalk on August 12, 2022
You can use your smart phone to browse stories in the comfort of your hand. Simply browse this site on your smart phone.
Using an RSS Reader you can access most recent stories and other feeds posted on this network.
SNetwork Recent Stories
![]() | ![]() |
by ahnationtalk on August 5, 202283 Views
August 4, 2022
The two largest agencies responsible for the language we use to discover books in libraries in North America — the Library of Congress in the United States, and Library and Archives Canada — are changing how they refer to Indigenous Peoples.
Recently, the Library of Congress announced that by September 2022 a project would be underway to revise terms that refer to Indigenous Peoples.
Beginning in 2019, Library and Archives Canada made changes within Canadian subject headings, starting with replacing outdated terminology with “Indigenous peoples” and “First Nations,” and adding terms that specify Métis and other specific nations and peoples.
Clients: | No Clients |
---|
Categories: | Education, Mainstream Aboriginal Related News |
---|
This article comes from NationTalk:
https://nationtalk.ca
The permalink for this story is:
https://nationtalk.ca/story/libraries-in-the-u-s-and-canada-are-changing-how-they-refer-to-indigenous-peoples-the-conversation
Comments are closed.
Receive the latest articles right in your inbox!
Morning Brief (Sample)