Book Chapters

  1. Craft, A. (2016). Giving and receiving life from Anishinaabe nibi inaakonigewin (our water law) research. In J. Thorpe, S. Rutherford & L.A. Sandberg (Eds.), Methodological challenges in Nature-Culture and Environmental History Research (pp. 125-139). London, UK: Routledge.
  2. Harris, L. (2016). Theorizing gender, ethnic difference, and inequality in relation to water access and quality in southeastern Turkey. In C.M. Ashcraft & T. Mayer (Eds.), The Politics of Fresh Water (pp. 141-155). London UK: Routledge.
  3. Bakker, K. (2017). The Business of Water. In K. Conca & E. Weinthal (Eds.), Oxford Handbook of Water Politics and Water Policy (pp. 1-28). Oxford, UK: Oxford University Press.
  4. Bakker, K., Harris, L., Joe, N. & Simms, R. (2017). Indigenous People and Water Governance in Canada: Regulatory Injustice and Prospects for Reform. In R. Boelens, T. Perreault & J. Vos, Water Justice (pp. 193-209). Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press.Norman, E., & Bakker, K. (2017). Transcending borders through post-colonial water governance? Indigenous water governance across the Canada-US border. In S. Renzetti & D.P. Dupont, Water Policy and Governance in Canada (pp. 139-157). Switzerland: Springer International Publishing.  
  5. Mohensi, M., McBean, E.A., & Rodriguez, M.J. (2017). Chlorination of drinking water – Scientific evidence and policy implications. In S. Renzetti & D.P. Dupont, Water Policy and Governance in Canada (pp. 357-373). Switzerland: Springer International Publishing.
  6. Dunn, G., Harris, L., & Bakker, K. (2017). Canadian drinking water policy: jurisdictional variation in the context of decentralized water governance. In S. Renzetti & D.P. Dupont, Water Policy and Governance in Canada (pp. 301-320). Switzerland: Springer International Publishing.
  7. Craft, A (TBA). The Canadian Water Agency as an Opportunity to Decolonize Water Governance, with Florence Robert and Caitlin De Simone, in Marie-France Fortin, Alexandre Lillo, Éric Champagne, and Lauren Touchant (eds) Canadian Water Agency: Multisectoral Issues of Law and Governance (LexisNexis, forthcoming).
  8. Craft, A (2019). Navigating Our Ongoing Sacred Legal Relationship with Nibi (Water), in J. Borrows, L. Chartrand, O. Fitzgerald and R Schwartz (eds), Braiding Legal Orders: Implementing the United Nations Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples (Centre for International Governance Innovation, 2019) pp.101-110
  9. Craft, A (2018). Navigating Our Ongoing Sacred Legal Relationship with Nibi (Water), in Special Report, UNDRIP Implementation: More Reflections on the Braiding of International, Domestic and Indigenous Laws, (Centre for International Governance Innovation, 2018) pp. 53-62.
  10. Neither Infringement nor Justification–the SCC’s Mistaken Approach to Reconciliation,in B. Gunn and K. Drake (eds), Renewing Relationships: Indigenous Peoples and Canada (University of Saskatchewan Native Law Centre, 2019) Chapter 3, pp. 59-82
  11. Navigating Our Ongoing Sacred Legal Relationship with Nibi (Water), in J. Borrows, L.Chartrand, O. Fitzgerald and R Schwartz (eds), Braiding Legal Orders: Implementing the United Nations Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples (Centre for International Governance Innovation, 2019) pp.101-110
  12. Enhanced Indigenism: Indian Political and Legal Identities-the Unintended Consequence of the Federal Government’s 1969 White Paper Policy in Jean Leclair et NouraKarazivan (eds),Pierre Elliott Trudeau’s Intellectual, Political and ConstitutionalLegacy/L’héritage intellectuel, politique et constitutionnel de Pierre Elliott Trudeau (LexisNexisCanada, 2020) pp. 240-271.
  13. COVID-19 and First Nations Responses with Deborah McGregor and Jeffrey Hewitt, in Colleen M Flood, Vanessa MacDonnell, Jane Philpott, Sophie Theriault and Sridhar Venkapuram (eds), Vulnerable: The Policy, Law and Ethics of COVID-19 (University of Ottawa Press, 2020) pp. 49-67.
  14. Foreword with Leona Star and Dawnis Kennedy in Elizabeth Carlson-Manathara and Gladys Rowe (eds), Living in Indigenous Sovereignty (Fernwood Publishing, 2021).
  15. La souveraineté territoriale exprimée par le biais de naissances au sein de territoires autochtones: u projet collaboratif pour le mieux-être des prochaines générations in Geneviève Motard and Geneviève Nootens (eds), Souverainetés et autodéterminations autochtones (Pressesde l’Université Laval, 2021).

Journal issues edited:

Water special issue, “Sustainable Water Governance through Indigenous Research Approaches” 13:4, 2021 Aimée Craft with Deb McGregor.  

Aimée Craft & Lucas King, Building the Treaty #3 Nibi Declaration Using an Anishinaabe Methodology of Ceremony, Language and Engagement. Water (Special Issue Sustainable Water Governance through Indigenous Research Approaches). 13:4 532-547, 2021.