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The Aborigines Report (1837): A Case Study in the Slow Change of Colonial Social Relations
Argues the report provides an insight into the negative effects of colonialism the persistence of issues in some areas due to the same vested interests being present.
Absorbing the 'Aboriginal Problem': Controlling Interracial Marriage in Australia in the Late 19th and Early 20th Centuries
Academic Massacres: The Story of Two American Indian Women and Their Struggle to Survive Academia
Academic Massacres: The Story of Two American Indian Women and Their Struggle to Survive Academia
Academic Persistence Among Native American College Students
Access in Theory and Practice: American Indians in Philosophy History
Activism and Apathy: The Prices We Pay for Both
An Activist Posing as an Academic?
Adjusting the Margins: Locating Identity in the Poetry
of Diane Glancy
The Ahalaya Case-Management for HIV-Infected American Indians, Alaska Natives, and Native Hawaiians: Quantitative and Qualitative Evaluation of Impacts
Alaska Native Drug Users and Sexually Transmitted Disease: Results of a Five-Year Study
Alaska Native Mortality, 1979-1998
Alcohol as a Risk Factor for HIV Transmission Among American Indian and Alaska Native Drug Users
Alcohol Use and Adolescent Pregnancy
"All This Water Imagery Must Mean Something": Thomas King's Revision of Narratives of Domination and Conquest in Green Grass, Running Water
Allotment Protest and Tribal Discourse: Reading Wynema's Successes and Shortcomings
Alter-Native Nations and Narrations: The World of DeWitt Clinton Duncan (Too-Qua-Stee), Charles A. Eastman (Ohiyesa) and E. Pauline Johnson
American Indian Baseball
American Indian Identity and Intellectualism: The Quest For a New Red Pedagogy
American Indian Women's Activism in the 1960s and 1970s
Americans and Other Aliens in the Navajo Historical Imagination in the Nineteenth Century
Analysis of a "Mixed Economy" in an Alaskan Native Settlement: The Case of Arctic Village
An Annotated Secondary Bibliography of Louise Erdrich’s Recent Fiction: The Bingo Palace,Tales of Burning Love, and The Antelope Wife
Appropriate Technologies in the Traditional Native American Smokehouse: Public Health Considerations in Tribal Community Development
Examines how the Swinomish Indian Tribal Community was able to build a ceremonial smokehouse and reduce the associated health risks, by applying appropriate technologies.
Arctic Health Policy: Contribution of Scientific Data
The Artistry and Ability of Traditional Women Healers
Aspects of Community Healing: Experiences of the Sault Sainte Marie Tribe of Chippewa Indians
The Assessment of Radiation Exposures in Native American Communities from Nuclear Weapons Testing in Nevada
"At the Head of the Aboriginal Remnant": Cherokee Construction of a "Civilized" Indian Indentity During the Lakota Crisis of 1876
Authoritative Texts, Collaborative Ethnography, and Native American Studies
Balancing Culture and Professional Education: American Indians/Alaska Natives and the Helping Professions
Basic Empowering Strategies for the Classroom
Beading the Multicultural World: Louise Erdrich's The Antelope Wife and the Sacred Metaphysic
Being There: The Importance of a Field Experience
in Teaching Native American Literature
Beyond the Margin: American Indians, First Nations, and Archaeology in North America
Bicultural Resynthesis: Tailoring an Effectiveness Trial For a Group of Urban American Indian Women
Biological Warfare in Eighteenth-Century North America: Beyond Jeffery Amherst
Discusses the controversy over whether the British general deliberately distributed blankets infected with smallpox as a method of decimating the population of Delaware, Shawnee, and Mingo Indians surrounding Fort Pitt, Pennsylvania during Pontiac's War.
The Birth of an Activist: Fred Mahone and the Politicization of the Hualapai, 1918 to 1923
Blood Pressure Among the Inuit (Eskimo) Populations in the Arctic
Bridging the Gap Between High School and College
Brief note from Carter Revard on His Community, The
Osage Nation
Bright Child of Oklahoma: Lotsee Patterson and the Development of America's Tribal Libraries
The British, the Indians, and Smallpox: What Actually Happened at Fort Pitt in 1763?
The Broken Crucible of Assimilation: Forest Grove Indian School and the Origins of Off-Reservation Boarding-School Education in the West
Using selected correspondence to explore the experiences of Indigenous students at Forest Grove Indian School in Oregon. The primary sources discussed are provided at the end of the article.