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Aboriginal Children's Hurt & Healing (ACHH) Initiative: First Nation Community Health Video new
Aboriginal Children's Hurt & Healing (ACHH) Initiative, John R. Sylliboy, Margot Latimer, Sharon Rudderham First Peoples Child & Family Review, Vol. 13, No. 2, Special Audiovisual Edition, 2019, p. [12]. Links to short video which discusses the ACHH's research on helping healthcare professionals to understand pain and hurt from a Mi'kmaw perspective. Research done in collaboration with Artist Alan Syliboy, illustrates how participants think about and express pain. ACHH Initiative Duration 5:03 More information... (Rating: 0.00, Votes: 0, Reviews: 0) Reviews | Rate It | Add to Favourites
ácimostawin new
Mandee McDonald Decolonization, Vol. 3, No. 3, Indigenous Land-Based Education, 2014, pp. [180]-184. In short non-fiction piece author talks about her experiences at Dechinta Bush University. More information... (Rating: 0.00, Votes: 0, Reviews: 0) Reviews | Rate It | Add to Favourites
The Akwesasne Cultural Restoration Program: A Mohawk Approach to Land-Based Education new
Taiaiake Alfred Decolonization, Vol. 3, No. 3, Indigenous Land-Based Education, 2014, pp. [134]-144. Tracks the creation of a cultural apprenticeship program which aims to give youth in the community the necessary skills, knowledge and experiences in land, language and culture to retain and regenerate land-based practices which had been affected by environmental contamination. More information... (Rating: 0.00, Votes: 0, Reviews: 0) Reviews | Rate It | Add to Favourites
Animkee new
James Schlonies, M'Wikwedong Youth Group, Carlos E. Sanchez-Pimienta, Jeffrey Masuda First Peoples Child & Family Review, Vol. 13, No. 2, Special Audiovisual Edition, 2019, p. [10]. Links to a short video in which the narrator speaks about his experience with mainstream education and mental health institutions, and his more positive experience with culturally-based healing practices. Animkee Duration: 2:35 More information... (Rating: 0.00, Votes: 0, Reviews: 0) Reviews | Rate It | Add to Favourites
Challenges and Resiliency in Aboriginal Adults with Fetal Alcohol Spectrum Disorder new
Melanie Samaroden First Peoples Child & Family Review, Vol. 13, No. 1, 2018, pp. [8]-19. Literature review focuses on rate of criminal activity and re-offense, stigma, lack of support services, and the ongoing effects of intergenerational trauma. Suggests future research on aging with FASD and helpful interventions. More information... (Rating: 0.00, Votes: 0, Reviews: 0) Reviews | Rate It | Add to Favourites
Challenges in Harnessing Indigenous Knowledge Systems through Creation of Employment for Rural Women in Tanzania: The Case Study of Barabaig Leather Products in Manyara Region new
John M. Mtui IK: Other Ways of Knowing, Vol. 4, pp. 68-94. Study surveyed 100 households on use of traditional knowledges in production of leather hides for clothing. Identifies opportunities and barriers for sustained poverty reduction, and makes recommendations for both improving the perception, transmission, and use of traditional knowledge and techniques, and for integrating methods. More information... (Rating: 0.00, Votes: 0, Reviews: 0) Reviews | Rate It | Add to Favourites
Cree Elders’ Perspectives on Land-Based Education: A Case Study new
John Hansen Brock Education , Vol. 28, No. 1, 2018, pp. 74-91. Explores land-based education through interviews with six Swampy Cree Elders from Northern Manitoba. Five themes emerged: counseling from the Elders, traditional teachings, ceremonies, and a connection to the land. [Find location of Opaskwayak Cree Nation using Google Maps] [Find offline items for Hansen, John G.] More information... (Rating: 0.00, Votes: 0, Reviews: 0) Reviews | Rate It | Add to Favourites
Dechinta Bush University: Mobilizing a Knowledge Economy of Reciprocity, Resurgence and Decolonization new
Erin Freeland Ballantyne Decolonization, Vol. 3, No. 3, Indigenous Land-Based Education, 2014, pp. [67]-85. Describes the land-based university program and its role in resisting settler colonial capitalism, particularly the oil-based extractive resource economy that has defined the relationship between the Dene and the Canadian nation state. More information... (Rating: 0.00, Votes: 0, Reviews: 0) Reviews | Rate It | Add to Favourites
Editorial: It Takes All of Us to Enforce the Law new
First Nations Child & Family Caring Society of Canada, [Sarah Clarke, Sébastien Grammond, Anne Levesque, David Taylor] First Peoples Child & Family Review, Vol. 13, No. 2, Special Audiovisual Edition, 2018, p. [5]. Links to a short film which examines the history and significance of a case in which the Canadian Human Rights Tribunal found Canada guilty of racial discrimination against First Nations Children. Duration 26:16It Takes All of Us ... Duration 26:16. More information... (Rating: 0.00, Votes: 0, Reviews: 0) Reviews | Rate It | Add to Favourites
Editorial: Jordan's Principle PSA in American Sign Language new
First Nations Child & Family Caring Society of Canada First Peoples Child & Family Review, Vol. 13, No. 2, Special Audiovisual Edition, 2018, p. [4]. Links to a short video which provides information on a legal rule (named for Jordan River Anderson) which attempts to ensure that services are available to First Nations children when they are needed. Duration: 1:57 ASL Video More information... (Rating: 0.00, Votes: 0, Reviews: 0) Reviews | Rate It | Add to Favourites
Equality new
Mars Patel, Samaira Prabhakar, Nahalia Scott First Peoples Child & Family Review, Vol. 13, No. 2, Special Audiovisual Edition, 2018, p. 6. Student artwork juxtaposes school on reserve and one found in their community. More information... (Rating: 0.00, Votes: 0, Reviews: 0) Reviews | Rate It | Add to Favourites
Fair new
Hamza Hussain, Yuktha Kowlessur First Peoples Child & Family Review, Vol. 13, No. 1, 2018, p. 20. Students' poem reflects classroom lessons on Shannen Koostachin and her advocacy for quality education and schools on reserve. More information... (Rating: 0.00, Votes: 0, Reviews: 0) Reviews | Rate It | Add to Favourites
Gii-kaapizigemin Manoomin Neyaashing: A Resurgence of Anishinaabeg Nationhood new
Jana-Rae Yerxa Decolonization, Vol. 3, No. 3, Indigenous Land-Based Education, 2014, pp. [159]-166. Explains how gathering at the Point to roast wild rice and therefore renewing and honouring relationships between Anishinaabeg, the location and the sacred food constitutes an act of governance. More information... (Rating: 0.00, Votes: 0, Reviews: 0) Reviews | Rate It | Add to Favourites
Girls in a field
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Marcie Rendon Decolonization, Vol. 3, No. 3, Indigenous Land-Based Education, 2014, pp. [185]-186. Poem. More information... (Rating: 0.00, Votes: 0, Reviews: 0) Reviews | Rate It | Add to Favourites
Give Children All Rights new
Aliya Garasia First Peoples Child & Family Review, Vol. 13, No. 1, 2018, p. 34. Poem. More information... (Rating: 0.00, Votes: 0, Reviews: 0) Reviews | Rate It | Add to Favourites
Indigenous Beverage Production and Economic Empowerment of Rural Women in Rwanda new
Chika Ezeanya-Esiobu, Vedaste Ndugutse, Salomon Nshimyimana IK: Other Ways of Knowing, Vol. 4, 2018, pp. 1-25. Study examines the potential financial benefits for women producing four beverages using Indigenous recipes and the methods by which they can be sold. More information... (Rating: 0.00, Votes: 0, Reviews: 0) Reviews | Rate It | Add to Favourites
Indigenous Peoples and Empowerment via Technology new
Katalina Toth, Daisy Smith, and Daphne Giroux First Peoples Child & Family Review, Vol. 13, No. 1, 2018, pp. [21]-33. Argues that increased access to communications technology and narrowing the digital divide would have positive effects in the lives of Aboriginal peoples in Quebec and discusses how, when implemented in accordance with cultural values, it can be used to improve education and health outcomes. More information... (Rating: 0.00, Votes: 0, Reviews: 0) Reviews | Rate It | Add to Favourites
Indigenous Unemployment in Rural and Regional Western Australia: A Contextual, Cultural and Bottom-up Approach new
Reena Tiwari, Stephanie Harris, José Van Den Akker Indigenous Policy Journal , Vol. 29, No. 1, Spring, 2018, pp. 1-18. Authors argue that current top-down policy models have produced poor outcomes, and that social and economic change must start at a grass-roots level and be tailored to individual communities' specific geographical and cultural concerns. Looks at the issues through fieldwork in the remote settlement of Wakathuni. More information... (Rating: 0.00, Votes: 0, Reviews: 0) Reviews | Rate It | Add to Favourites
Indigenous Vegetable Production and the Economic Empowerment of Rural Women in Africa: Reality, Prospects, and Challenges in Rwanda new
Chika Ezeanya-Esiobu, Nathan Kanuma Taremwa, Djamali Nambajimana,Olivier Mugwaneza IK: Other Ways of Knowing, Vol. 4, 2018, pp. 133-156. Study explores the role of rural women in the farming and gathering of indigenous vegetables, and the impact of the shift to consumption of modern, less nutritious varieties. Research examines benefits of cultivating and consuming traditional vegetables, and identifies barriers to increased production. More information... (Rating: 0.00, Votes: 0, Reviews: 0) Reviews | Rate It | Add to Favourites
Knowing of Indigenous Ways: Fieldwork Dispatches from Atitlán, Guatemala new
Lucy Caroline Pollard Harbor IK: Other Ways of Knowing, Vol. 4, 2018, pp. 157-166. Author describes her experience conducting ethnographic research with Indigenous Tz’utujil residents of Santiago Atitlán, as they navigate the growing tourism industry in their town. More information... (Rating: 0.00, Votes: 0, Reviews: 0) Reviews | Rate It | Add to Favourites
Land, Life, and Knowledge in Chisasibi: Intergenerational Healing in the Bush new
Ioana Radu, Lawrence (Larry) M. House, Eddie Pashagumskum Decolonization, Vol. 3, No. 3, Indigenous Land-Based Education, 2014, pp. [86]-105. Describes the land- and culture-based healing program developed by the Cree Nation of Chisasibi which promotes personal, family and community wellness rooted in the Cree way of life. Participants spend two- to three-weeks at a bush camp located 500 km east the community. More information... (Rating: 0.00, Votes: 0, Reviews: 0) Reviews | Rate It | Add to Favourites
Learning to Talk to the Land: Online Stewardship in Taku River Tlingit Territory new
Christine Schreyer, Jon Corbett, Nicole Gordon, Colleen Larson Decolonization, Vol. 3, No. 3, Indigenous Land-Based Education, 2014, pp. 106-133. Article describes a web-based participatory mapping tool(https://trt.geolive.ca/) which combines ideologies of stewardship with place names and stories. [Find location of Taku River Tlingit First Nation using Google Maps] More information... (Rating: 0.00, Votes: 0, Reviews: 0) Reviews | Rate It | Add to Favourites
Life as a Clock new
Hayley Harder First Peoples Child & Family Review, Vol. 13, No. 1, 2018, pp. 5-7. Slam poem about on missing and murdered Indigenous women and girls in Canada. More information... (Rating: 0.00, Votes: 0, Reviews: 0) Reviews | Rate It | Add to Favourites
Live-In Family Enhancement (LIFE): A Comprehensive Program for Healing and Family Reunification new
Lawrence Deane, Jenna Glass, Inez Vystrcil-Spence, Javier Mignone First Peoples Child & Family Review, Vol. 13, No. 1, 2018, pp. [35]-49. Summarizes the evaluation report of program run by Métis Child, Family, and Community Services in Winnipeg. Aimed at family reunification, the program involves parents and children moving into a full-time foster home with comprehensive support including parenting skills, household management, social support, sobriety, financial stability and employability. Paper briefly describes outcomes, relates these to literature review, describes innovative funding model, and discuses program's potential as prevention tool. More information... (Rating: 0.00, Votes: 0, Reviews: 0) Reviews | Rate It | Add to Favourites
Meeting Halfway: Reassessing “Cognizable to the Canadian Legal and Constitutional Structure” new
Julia Tousaw Indigenous Law Journal, Vol. 16/17, No. 1, 2018, pp. 85-129. Argues that because Canadian courts harbor two misconceptions about Indigenous laws (that they are facts and that they are excessively general) they reject them on the basis that they are not clearly identifiable. Author suggests that analogical reasoning, similar to that used in the application of Common law, with its emphasis relevance would be a more appropriate approach. More information... (Rating: 0.00, Votes: 0, Reviews: 0) Reviews | Rate It | Add to Favourites |
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