“…Housing is of particular significance, as housing distress may drive higher rates of mobility (Belanger, Awosoga, and Weasal Head 2013), and yet the federal government has for decades neglected the housing needs of the Aboriginal population seeking to establish itself in the city, and has focused rather on reserve-based housing (Belanger, Weasal Head, and Awosoga 2012). Internationally, it has been argued that urban service providers have difficulties meeting the transitional needs of mobile Indigenous populations, largely due to complications in providing continuous and adequate care to non-stationary populations (Clatworthy and Norris 2007;CMHC 2002;Prout and Yap 2010;Taylor 1998). According to the United Nations (2010), Indigenous peoples' urban mobility remains an ongoing priority area, as frequent Indigenous movers often experience limited access to health, housing, employment, and education services, broadly due to a lack of adequate access to information, and to resistance on the part of dominant governance structures to acknowledging and valuing Indigenous peoples' right to self-determination and ways of knowing, including participation in, and co-creation of, urban planning and the management of services.…”