What is Bill-31 and Bill-3?
What It Takes to Support a Loved One with FASD: A Photovoice Project for the CanFASD Research Network Family Advisory Committee
What Strikes a Chord?: The Construction of Resonance in Collective Action Frames on Missing and Murdered Indigenous Women and Girls in Canada
When Consumerism and Art Collide: A Question of Identity
When Disinformation Turns Deadly: The Case of Missing and Murdered Indigenous Women and Girls in Canadian Media
When Research is Relational: Supporting the Research Practices of Indigenous Studies Scholars
When the Children Left
Short documentary about a woman's sister who died while completing her high school away from home.
When the City Sleeps, We Dream of Disruption: A Review of Lisa Jackson's Transmissions Exhibition
"When the Time Comes": A Guide for End-of-Life Planning for Indigenous People
Topics include cultural protocols, directions for care, services and burial, giving possessions, coping with grief, legal implications, and sensitive or difficult situations.
When the Whalers Were Up North: Inuit Memories from the Eastern Arctic
Where are the Fish? Using a “Fish as Food” Framework to Explore the Thunder Bay Area Fisheries
Where are you from? Reframing Facilitated Admissions Policies in the Faculty of Health Sciences
Where is Here?
Using their own personal reflections the author looks at Ontario Indigenous land claims and its impact into modern times.
Where the Spirit Lives
White Cap, Sioux Chief
The White People Problem: Experiments in the Reverse Gaze.
The White Stone Canoe: A Legend of the Ottawas
Who Is a Status Indian?
[Who Owns the Beaver?: Northern Algonquian Land Tenure Reconsidered, Special Issue, Anthropologica 28, (1-2), 1986.]
Whose Land Is It? Rethinking Sovereignty in British Columbia
Whose Law? Whose Justice: Two Conflicting Systems of Law and Justice in Canada's Northwest Territories
“Whose voices are not in the room?” Indigenous Women’s Participation in the Arctic Climate Crisis Research
Why Are We Settling? Indigenous Cultural Safety Education for Counsellors in Ontario
Kinesiology Thesis (PhD) -- Queen's University, 2020.
Wii Niiganabying (Looking Ahead): Rearticulating Indigenous Control of Education
Wiisaakodewininiwag ga-nanaakonaawaad: Jiibe-Giizhikwe, Racial Homeopathy, and "Eastern Metis" Identity Claims
Evaluation of Dr. Sebastien Malette and Guilliaume Marcotte's article and testimony regarding Marie-Louise Riel being Louis Riel's aunt. The two were expert witnesses in two courts cases regarding the claim of a historical Métis community in eastern Canada.
Wildlife Management in Nunavik: Structures, Operations, and Perceptions Following the James Bay and Northern Quebec Agreement
William Bleasdell Cameron and Horse Child
Historical note:
William McLennan, 4 October 1948-3 July 2020. Curator Emeritus, Museum of Anthropology at UBC, Vancouver
Winnipeg Cavalry at Fort Qu'Appelle, North-West Rebellion, 1885
[Wise Practices]: Annotated Bibliography
Wise Practices for Cultural Safety in Electronic Health Research and Clinical Trials with Indigenous People: Secondary Analysis of a Randomized Clinical Trial
The Witcihitisotan (Mutual Support) Committee by and for the Families of Indigenous Adolescents in the City
Examines the use of a peer supported initiative to provide a collective space to help with Indigenous parent-youth relationships.
Witnessing Painful Pasts: Understanding Images of Sports at Canadian Indian Residential Schools
Witnessing the Unspoken Truth: On Residential School Survivors' Testimonies in Canada
Wm. Scott and T. Pike in front of Humboldt Telegraph Station
"Woman's Truth" and the Native Tradition: Anne Cameron's Daughters of Copper Woman
“Women and 2spirits”: On the Marginalization of Transgender Indigenous People in Activist Rhetoric
Women in Huron and Ojibwa Societies
"Women's Truth" and the Native Tradition: Anne Cameron's Daughters of Copper Women
Work 2 Give: Fostering Collective Citizenship through Artistic and Healing Spaces for Indigenous Inmates and Communities in British Columbia
Working at Leisure: Inuit Subsistence in an Era of Animal Protection
Workmanship and Relationships: Indigenous Food Trading and Sharing Practices on Vancouver Island
Would Program Performance Indicators and a Nationally Coordinated Response Accelerate the Elimination of Tuberculosis Canada?
Wounded Carried to the Rear from the Fight at Fish Creek - Sketch. - 16 May 1885
Wrestling with Fire: Indigenous Women’s Resistance and Resurgence
‘You Know What You Know’: An Indigenist Methodology with Haudenosaunee Grandmothers
Yukon First Nations Resources for Teachers 2019 / 2020
Zareba and Sleeping Soldiers at Batoche
Historical note:
A zareba is an encampment used as a base of attack and defense."The Zareba Batoche, N.W. Rebellion, 1885"
Historical note:
A zareba is a stockade made of bushes: an outdoor enclosure, especially one made of thorn bushes and used as protection around a campsite or village.