History
- Early History to Royal Proclamation (-1763)
- Royal Proclamation to Confederation (1763-1870)
- Numbered Treaty Era (1871-1944)
- Post World War to White Paper (1945-1968)
- White Paper to Truth and Reconciliation Commission (1969-2007)
- Truth and Reconciliation Commission to Present (2008-Present)
- Anthropology
- Archaeology
- Christianity
- First Nations & Reserves
- Leaders
- Oral History
- Fur Trade & Exploration
- War & Conflict
Waste Management in Labrador and Northern Communities: Opportunities and Challenges
Water-rights Settlements and Reclamation in Central Arizona as a Cross-cultural Experience: A Reexamination of Native Water Policy
"Water We Believed Could Never Belong to Anyone":
The San Luis Rey River and the Pala Indians of Southern California
The Water We Call Home: Five Generations of Indigenous Women's Resistance along the Salish Sea
Watered by Tempests: Hurricanes in the Cultural Fabric of the United Houma Nation
The Way of Inuit Art: Aesthetics and History in and Beyond the Arctic
A Way of Life
A Way of Life
Discusses the history of the fur trade in the Northwest Territories and contemporary trapping practices, and gives detailed instructions for making snowshoes, kamiks, spruce canoes, and trap sets and preparing and eating country food.
A Way of Life Lost: The Legacy of Residential Schools
A Way Out: The History of the Outing Program from the Haskell Institute to the Phoenix Indian School
The Way We Never Were: Native Americans in Popular Culture: A Proposal for a Virtual Reality Based Exhibit
We Are All Treaty People
Special themed issue of Canada's History's children's magazine Kayak (September 2018). Suitable for ages 7-12.
We Are All Treaty People: Maritime Beginnings
We are All Treaty People: New Models for a Shared Future
[We are all Treaty People: Prairie Essays]
We are All Treaty People: Redefining the Relationship
We Are an Indian Nation: A History of the Hualapai People
We Are Coming Home: Repatriation and the Restoration of Blackfoot Cultural Confidence
We Are Coming Home: Repatriation and the Restoration of Blackfoot Cultural Confidence
We are Métis: A Métis Perspective of the Evolution of an Indigenous Canadian People
"We Are Not Now As We Once Were": Iowa Indians' Political and Economic Adaptations During U.S. Incorporation
"We Are Not to Grow Wild": Seventeenth-Century New England's Repudiation of Anglo-Indian Intermarriage
We Are Part of a Tradition: A Guide on Two-Spirited People for First Nations Communities
"We Are Still Didene": Stories of Hunting and History From Northern British Columbia
We Are the Wuikinuxv Nation
"We Are Well As We Are": An Indian Critique of Seventeenth-Century Christian Missions
We Call It Survival: The Life Story of Abraham Okpik
"We Celebrate Our Own Funeral, the Discovery of America:" Pathos, Promise, and Constraint in Simon Pokagon's (Potawatomie) Resistance to the 1893 World's Fair
We Continue to Massacre the Education of the American Indian
We Don't Live in Snow Houses Now: Reflections of Arctic Bay
"We had to be off by sundown": Narungga Contributions to Farming Industries on Yorke Peninsula (Guurnada), South Australia
We Have a Story to Tell: Native Peoples of the Chesapeake Region
We Have Always Been Here: Rebuttal to the 2021 Nunatsiavut Government Report Entitled “Examining the NunatuKavut Community Council’s Land Claim”
"We Have Bigotry All Right—but No Alabamas": Racism and Aboriginal Protest in Canada during the 1960s
We Have Stories: Five Generations of Indigenous Women in Water
“We Have Stuff Enough in Us to Get Better”: Healing Through Truth Telling in Contemporary Indigenous Women’s Literature
English Thesis (MA) -- St. Thomas University, 2014.
"We Honor the House": Lived Heritage, Memory, and Ambiguity at the Cathlapotle Plankhouse
“We know where we are” the Role of Place in Indigenous Historiography by Haudenosaunee and Northwest Métis Historians
History Thesis (PhD) -- University of Victoria, 2023.
"We Know Who We Are": Multiethnic Identity in a Montana Métis Community
"We Must Farm to Enable Us to Live": The Plains Cree and Agriculture to 1900
Disproves the commonly held belief that despite government efforts and assistance, reserve populations lacked the inclination or ability to farm.
Chapter five from The Prairie West as Promised Land edited by Chris Kitzan and R.D. Francis
[We Pioneered; Stoney Creek Woman: Sai'k'uz Ts'eke - The Story of Mary John]
"We're Taking the Genius of Sequoyah into This Century": The Cherokee Syllabary, Peoplehood, and Perseverance
"We Shall be One People": Early Modern French Perceptions of the Amerindian Body
We Shall Remain: Teacher's Guide [Episode 1: After the Mayflower]
We Shall Remain: Teacher's Guide [Episode 2: Tecumseh's Vision]
We Shall Remain: Teacher's Guide [Episode 3: Trail of Tears]
We Share Our Matters = Teionkwakhashion Tsi Niionkwariho:ten: Two Centuries of Writing and Resistance at Six Nations of the Grand River
"We Took the Children From the Mothers": What About the Mothers (and Fathers) Then?
Comments on the Australian Federal Government's inaction in relation to the provision of compensation to the Stolen Generations.