Healthy Aging in Place: Environmental Scan Île-à-la-Crosse
Healthy Teeth, Healthy Lives: Inuit Oral Health Action Plan 2013
Helicobacter Pylori Incidence and Re-Infection in the Aklavik H. Pylori Project
The Helping Horse: How Equine Assisted Learning Contributes to the Wellbeing of First Nations Youth in Treatment for Volatile Substance Misuse
Hi-Ho Mistahey!
Hidden Authority, Public Display: Representations of First Nations Peoples at the Calgary Stampede, 1912-1970
Hidden in Plain Sight: Contributions of Aboriginal Peoples to Canadian Identity and Culture
[Hidden in Plain Sight: Contributions of Aboriginal Peoples to Canadian Identity and Culture, vol. II]
The Hidden Voices of Nuu'Chah'Nulth Women
Historic Agreements Between Federal Government and FSIN
Historic Land Use Processes in Alaska's Koyukuk River Area
Historical Development of the Tax Regimes of Maori Authorities in Aotearoa New Zealand and First Nations in Canada
Historical Highlights Leading to the Development of First Nations Education Law in Canada
Historical Landmarks, State Policies and Indigenous Self-determination in Brazil and Canada
A History of Riel's Second Rebellion and How It Was Quelled
The History of the North-West Rebellion of 1885
"History's Blinkers": Resituating 1950s Aboriginal Socio-Economic History Within Anomie Theory
History, the Courts and Treaty Policy: Lessons from Marshall and Nisga'a
Discusses landmark court cases dealing with fishing rights in Nova Scotia and a dispute involving Aboriginal title which took place in British Columbia. Chapter two from Setting the Agenda for Change, vol. 1, which vol. 1 in the Aboriginal Policy Research series. Originally presented at the Aboriginal Policy Research Conference, 2002.
HIV/AIDS, Colonialism and Aboriginal Youth in Canada: Implications for HIV Prevention Work
HIV and AIDS in Canada: Surveillance Report to December 31, 2012
HIV and AIDS in Saskatchewan 2012
Holding Our Breath: The Work of Adrian Stimson
Home in the City: Urban Aboriginal Housing and Living Conditions
Home Truths: Highlights from BC History
Homelessness, Urban Aboriginal People, and the Need for a National Enumeration
Honouring Tradition: Reframing Native Art
Hospital Care for Heart Attacks Among First Nations, Inuit and Métis
House at Batoche used as a Barracks by the Metis in 1885
Housing as a Determinant of Health in the Sayisi Dene First Nation, Tadoule Lake, Manitoba
Housing Conditions on a First Nations Community
Housing Discrimination among a Sample of Aboriginal People in Winnipeg and Thompson, Manitoba
Looks at perceived housing discrimination and the reactions and effects.
Chapter six from Setting the Agenda for Change, vol. 1, which is also vol. 1 in the Aboriginal Policy Research series.
Originally presented at the Aboriginal Policy Research Conference, 2002.
Housing Indian Elders On-reserve
How Are the Aspirations of British Columbia Institute of Technology First Nations Students Defined by Their Indigenous Perspective?
How Raven Gave Females Their Tsaw
How Women in Remote and Rural First Nation Communities Are Using Information and Communication Technologies (ICT)
Human Rights Complaints
Hunger among Inuit Children in Canada
Hydroelectric Power and Indian Water Rights on the Prairies
"I Came to Rite Thare Portraits": Paul Kane's Journal of His Western Travels, 1846-1848
“I Had to Grow Up Pretty Quickly”: Social, Cultural, and Gender Contexts of Aboriginal Girls’ Smoking
The Idea of Northwest Coast Native Art
Identification of a Probable Aarnguaq in a Sadlermiut Grave from Native Point, Southampton Island, Nunavut, Canada
Identifying Useful Approaches to the Governance of Indigenous Data
Identity and Cultural Difference in Contemporary Aboriginal Autobiographical Narratives in Canada and Australia
Idle No More
Idle No More a Unique, Unprecedented Moment in History
Comments on an informative meeting that looked at Aboriginal resistance over the past 150 years and a short history of the Indian Act.
Entire issue on one pdf. To access article scroll to p.16.
Idle No More at Six Months: Analysis of the First Six Months of the Idle No More Movement
Idle No More Coverage is a Story Half Told
Comments on a missed opportunity for the media to educate Canadians on aboriginal issues.
Entire issue on one pdf. To access article scroll to p.12.