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Royal Commission on Aboriginal Peoples: Presentation by School of Human Justice, Jim Harding
Royal Commission on Aboriginal Peoples: Presentation by Sharron Simpson, Chairman, Central Okanagan Regional District
Royal Commission on Aboriginal Peoples: Presentation by Vicki Wilson and Kula Ellison, Aboriginal Women's Council of Saskatchewan
Royal Commission on Aboriginal Peoples: Presentation by Wilfred Price, Treasurer, British Columbia Association of Friendship Centres
Royal Commission on Aboriginal Peoples: Presentation by Yvon Allard, Metis, Member of the Manitoba Metis Federation
Royal Commission on Aboriginal Peoples: Presentations by Jeri Von Ramin, Aboriginal Women's Canadian Labour Force
Royal Commission on Aboriginal Peoples: Presentations by Lizabeth Hall, Sherry Small and Dennis Fletcher
Royal Commission on Aboriginal Peoples: Presentations by Rena Kinney, Geraldine Thomas, Rosalind Caldwell, Lillian George and Betty Ann Barnes
Sacajawea and Her Sisters: Images and Native Women
A Safer Sex Trade Explored Through Film
Examines a documentary exploring the lives of different types of sex trade workers.
Entire issue on one pdf. To access article scroll to p.17.
Same/Difference: The Media, Equal Rights and Aboriginal Women in Canada, 1968
Saskatoon's Bernardo: A Serial Killer Preyed on Native Women. (John Martin Crawford)
Screening Programs For Breast Cancer Can Make All The Difference
Seals, Selfies, and the Settler State: Indigenous Motherhood and Gendered Violence in Canada
See[k]ing Aboriginal Mothers: Repairing Colonial Disruptions Through Marie Clements' The Unnatural and Accidential Women
Seeing Red: Anger, Femininity, and the American Indian of Nineteenth-Century Sentimental Literature
[Seeking Justice for Murdered and Missing Aboriginal Women]
“Sexual Savages:” Christian Stereotypes and Violence against North America’s Native Women
Shirley Cheechoo: Truth and Vision in Filmmaking
Single Mothers' Voices in the 1990s: An Exploration of Economics, Choices, and Relationships
Sisters in the Blood: The Education of Women in Native America
Siupakio and Sikunnacio
Skin Deep: Settler Impressions of Aboriginal Women
Social Denial: An Analysis of Missing and Murdered Indigenous Women and Girls in Canada
Social Hypocrisy Jeopardizes Street Prostitutes
Society Needs to Recognize Worth of Aboriginal Women
Discusses how advocates for Aboriginal women stress that society and the justice system need to treat Aboriginal women with the same respect as non-Aboriginal women.
Entire issue on one pdf. To access article scroll to p.5.
Someone's Mother, Sister or Daughter: Street Sex Workers, Their Families and Transitioning Out of Street Sex Work
Speculative Fiction in Native American Indian Literature: Active Resistance to Female American Indian Stereotypes
"A Squaw or a Woman:" Gender and Indian Agency in the Carlisle Indian Industrial School Newspapers, 1879-1900
Standing up Against the Giant
Stolen Sisters: Colonial Roots of Sexual Violence against Aboriginal Women and Unsympathetic Media Representations toward Their Stories in Contemporary Canada
Discusses how colonialism has created behavioral patterns and attitudes which serve to legitimize violence against Indigenous women and perpetuate racism and discrimination
Story-Telling: Australian Indigenous Women's Means of Health Promotion
Strategies of Discourse: Native American Women Characters in Jackson's Ramona, Callahan's Wynema, and Mourning Dove's Cogewea
[Studio Portrait of Aboriginal Woman]
Subject Consolidation, The Hierarchic Motive, and Two Months in the Camp of Big Bear
Survey Report on the Calls for Justice of the National Inquiry into Missing and Murdered Indigenous Women and Girls
Symbolic and Discursive Violence in Media Representations of Aboriginal Missing and Murdered Women
Taking Back Stolen Voices: Mahlikah Awe:ri's Poetry as Resistance for More Than 500 Missing Girls
Talkin' up Sport and Gender: Three Australian Aboriginal Women Speak
"A Taste of Paradise": Sacajawea and the Romanticizing of Americanization"
"Tell Me a Woman's Story": The Question of Gender in the Construction of Waheenee, Pretty-Shield, and Papago Woman
The Tender and Brave Heart of a Warrior Woman
Discusses achievements of Metis broadcaster and businesswoman Suzanne Rochon-Burnett, the first woman inducted into the Canadian Council of Aboriginal Business Hall of Fame.
Entire issue on one pdf. To access article scroll to p.21.