Metis prisoners in courtyard
Metis Rifle Pits Sketch Grayscale
Métis Seasonal Cycles
Métis Spiritualism
Métis Story Tellers
Metis Timeline Game
Students participate in game involving the events leading up to and following the Red River Resistance, with special attention to Louis Riel.
Métis Trappers and Hide Working
Métis Writers
The Mi'kmaq Nation and The Embodiment of Political Ideologies: Mi'kmaq, Protocol and Treaty Negotiations of the Eighteenth Century
The Mi'kmaq, Poor Settlers, and the Nova Scotia Fur Trade, 1783-1853
Mi'kmaq Treaties on Trial: History, Land, and Donald Marshall Junior
Mi'kmaq Women and Our Political Voice
Michif
Michif and Other Languages of the Canadian Métis
Micro-Reconciliation as a Pathway for Transformative Change
Middle-Class FAS: A Silent Epidemic? One Glass of Wine Won't Hurt," We Often Say - But the Latest Research Suggests Alcohol in the Womb is More Damaging Than We Guessed, Even in Low Doses
Middle Ear Abnormalities at Age Five in Relation with Early Onset Otitis Media and Number of Episodes, in the Inuit Population of Nunavik, Quebec, Canada
Mikmaq Women: Their Special Dialogue
Militia at Winnipeg Station, North-West Rebellion, 1885
A Million Porcupines Crying in the Dark
Minister Accused of Abuse of Power
Contends that the Indian Affairs Minister, Robert Nault, has dealt punitively with First Nations chiefs that have not agreed with his proposals and so the chiefs will be taking their complaints to the ethics commissioner, the Speaker of the House of Commons, the Auditor General of Canada and the Prime Minister.
Entire issue on one pdf. To access article scroll to p.3.
Mino Kaanjigoowin: Program Evaluation
Missing and Murdered Indigenous Women of North America: Culture as a Tool to Denounce
Mississaugas of the New Credit First Nation Inquiry: Toronto Purchase Claim
Mistahi-Muskwa (Big Bear)
Mistawasin [Mistawasis] Pow Wow Aug. 23 2003. - Slides.
Historical note:
The Mistawasis First Nation is located approximately 68 kilometres west of the city of Prince Albert, Saskatchewan. The Nation has one reserve with an area of approximately 125.44 square kilometres. The First Nation takes its name from the name of its first chief, Chief Mistawasis. Mistawasis, or "Big Child" in English, was the first person to sign Treaty 6 in 1876.Mistawasin [Mistawasis] Pow Wow Aug. 23 2003. - Slides.
Historical note:
The Mistawasis First Nation is located roughly 68 kilometres west of the city of Prince Albert, Saskatchewan. The Nation has one reserve with an area of approximately 125.44 square kilometres. The First Nation takes its name from the name of its first chief, Chief Mistawasis. Mistawasis, or "Big Child" in English, was the first person to sign Treaty 6 in 1876.Mistawasin [Mistawasis] Pow Wow Aug. 24 2003. - Slide.
Historical note:
The Mistawasis First Nation is located roughly 68 kilometres west of the city of Prince Albert, Saskatchewan. The Nation has one reserve with an area of approximately 125.44 square kilometres. The First Nation takes its name from the name of its first chief, Chief Mistawasis. Mistawasis, or "Big Child" in English, was the first person to sign Treaty 6 in 1876.Mistawasin [Mistawasis] Pow Wow Aug. 24 2003. - Slide.
Historical note:
The Mistawasis First Nation is located roughly 68 kilometres west of the city of Prince Albert, Saskatchewan. The Nation has one reserve with an area of approximately 125.44 square kilometres. The First Nation takes its name from the name of its first chief, Chief Mistawasis. Mistawasis, or "Big Child" in English, was the first person to sign Treaty 6 in 1876.Mistawasin [Mistawasis] Pow Wow Aug. 24 2003. - Slide.
Historical note:
The Mistawasis First Nation is located roughly 68 kilometres west of the city of Prince Albert, Saskatchewan. The Nation has one reserve with an area of approximately 125.44 square kilometres. The First Nation takes its name from the name of its first chief, Chief Mistawasis. Mistawasis, or "Big Child" in English, was the first person to sign Treaty 6 in 1876.Mistawasin [Mistawasis] Pow Wow Aug. 24 2003. - Slide.
Historical note:
The Mistawasis First Nation is located roughly 68 kilometres west of the city of Prince Albert, Saskatchewan. The Nation has one reserve with an area of approximately 125.44 square kilometres. The First Nation takes its name from the name of its first chief, Chief Mistawasis. Mistawasis, or "Big Child" in English, was the first person to sign Treaty 6 in 1876.Mobile Health for First Nations Populations: Systematic Review
Modern North: People, Politics and the Rejection of Colonialism
Modern Pathways and Evolving Definitions: Reframing "Aboriginal School Drop-out" in a Northern Canada Context
Money For Clean Water on Reserves Welcome
Moose Hunters of the Boreal Forest? A Re-examination of Subsistence Patterns in the Western Subarctic
More Than Words - Mohawk Language and Cultural Revitalization in New York
Morning Star: A Short Story
Mortality Among The James Bay Cree of Northern Quebec: 1982-1986
Mother Earth
Moving Towards an Indigenous Research Process: A Reflexive Approach to Empirical Work with First Nations Communities in Canada
A Multi-Dimensional Framework and its Application to Aboriginal Co-Management Arrangements in the Forest Sector of Canada
Multimorbidity Prevalence in Canada: A Comparison of Northern Territories with Provinces, 2013/14
Munro Earned Respect of Many
Murphy Diary
Museum, Kitigan Zibi in Tug of War Over Remains
Relates the First Nations band, Kitigan Zibi Anishnabeg, fight against the Canadian Museum of Civilization for human bones found within their traditional Algonquin territory.
Entire issue on one pdf. To access article scroll to p.24.