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Appendix I: Haida Stories and Beliefs
Approaching Mi'Kmaq Teachings on the Connectiveness of Humans and Nature
Bibliography: Who Owns Native Culture?
Claiming Native Narrative Control: Tomson Highway on Residential Schooling
Close Encounters of the Canadian Kind: Emily Carr’s Impressions of Nuu-chah-nulth Culture
Concept of Soul among North American Indians
Conflicting Ethics: Aboriginal Values and Religious Renaissance
Looks at four key themes through the validity of four case studies. Chapter nine from Learning, Technology, and Traditions, which is vol. 6 in the Aboriginal Policy Research series. Originally presented at the third annual Aboriginal Policy Research Conference, 2009.
Contributions to the Ethnology of the Haida
The Copper Eskimos
Cree Intellectual Traditions in History
Current Evidence on Factors That Impact Aboriginal Peoples' Resiliency and Vulnerability to HIV/AIDS
The Dane-zaa Creation Story
Dispersed But Not Destroyed: A History of the Seventeenth-Century Wendat People
[Foreword, Introduction]
Here be Dragons!: Breaking Down the Iron Cage for Aboriginal Children
The Indians
Indigenous Interventions at Klahowya Village, Xʷay'Xʷəy Vancouver/Unceded Coast Salish Territory
Indigenous Legal Traditions: Roots to Renaissance
The Kateri Chanting
Keepers of the Earth
Kwakwaka’wakw on Film
The Lillooet Indians
Memory and Place in Rudy Wiebe's A Discovery of Strangers
Mitákuye Owás’ (All My Relatives): Dakota Wiconi (Way of Life) and Wicozani Waste (Well-Being)
Discusses basic tenants of Dakota spiritual traditions. Chapter ten from Learning, Technology, and Traditions, which is vol. 6 in the Aboriginal Policy Research series. Originally presented at the third annual Aboriginal Policy Research Conference, 2009.
[My Great-Grandfather Keesta; Development of an Indigenous Theory]
The Mythology of the Bella Coola Indians
The Namgis First Nation of Alert Bay, Cormorant Island, British Columbia
Native American Religious Traditions
Nishnaabeg Resurgence: Stories from Within
Notes on Eskimo Traditions
Numbers in American Indian Mythology
The Origin of the Totemism of the Aborigines of British Columbia
The Policy Implications of Revitalizing Traditional Aboriginal Religions
Discusses religious revitalization by using the analogy of language revitalization.
Chapter eleven from Learning, Technology, and Traditions, which is vol. 6 in the Aboriginal Policy Research series.
Originally presented at the Aboriginal Policy Research Conference, 2009.
Practices of Plural Spiritualities in a Secular Society: Circles of Reconciliation With Aboriginal Peoples in Quebec
Spirituality and Addiction: The Role of Twelve-Step Programs in Eden Robinson's Blood Sports
Stories of Culture and Justice in the North
Survival: Colonialism as a Discourse in Beatrice Culleton’s Spirit of the White Bison
Taking the Medicine Wheel to the Street: Counselling Aboriginal Street Youth about HIV/AIDS and Educating Those Who Help Them
"They are Strongly Attached to the Country of Rivers, Lakes, and Forests": The Social Landscapes of the Northwest
The Thompson Indians of British Columbia
Traditional Aboriginal Pedagogy
Traditions of the Chilcotin Indians
Transformations: A Sto:lo-Coast Salish Historical Atlas
Unit 1: Our Relationship with the Land
Designed for use with Pearson Saskatchewan Social Studies 4. Part of unit introduces themes related to the Grade 4 Treaty Essential Learnings which discuss the Indian Act of 1876 and how it was not part of the treaty agreements.