Nurses Taking the Lead: A Community Engagement and Knowledge Exchange Forum on Substance Abuse and Addiction in Prince Albert, Saskatchewan
Nursing Practice in Rural and Remote Canada II: Registered Nurse National Survey Report
Nutrition North Canada: Real Change is Yet to Come
NWAC Report Card: September 2016-December 2016
NWT Educator Toolkit for Classroom Treaty Simulations
Of Linguicide and Resistance: Children and English Instruction in Nineteenth-Century Indian Boarding Schools in Canada
Of the Heart: Scoping Review of Indigenous Youth Suicide and Prevention
Of this Land, On this Land: Indigenous Artists Challenging the Racial Logics of Liberal Modernity
Offering our Gifts, Partnering for Change: Decolonizing Experimentation in Winnipeg-based Settler Archives
Okwire’shon:’a, the First Storytellers: Recovering Landed Consciousness in Readings of Trees & Texts
English Thesis (Ph.D.)--McMaster University, 2017. Refers to the works Power by Linda Hogan, Monkey Beach by Eden Robinson, and Truth and Bright Water by Thomas King.
Once They Were Hats: In Search of the Mighty Beaver
'The Only Good Thing That Happened at School': Colonising Narratives of Sport in the Indian School Bulletin
Ontario First Nations Special Education Review Report
Ontario's History of Tampering and Re-Tampering With Birth Registration Forms
Open Professional Learning Resources: Audience Profiles
Opioid Use in Pregnancy and Parenting: An Indigenous-Based Collaborative Framework for Northwestern Ontario
Opioids and Substances of Misuse among First Nations People in Alberta
Oral Traditions of the Woodland Cree (Nihithawak) in Northern Saskatchewan: Links to Cultural Identity, Ways of Knowing, Language Revitalization, and Connections to the Land + Nehithāwi – Kiskethihtamiwin: Kayās Āchimowina Ekwa Āchithohkewina. Nihithowewin, Nihithawihtāwin Mena Mithopimāchihowin
Discuss the significance of oral history to the Woodland Cree to reinforce their cultural worldview into the modern era.
Order of Canada Awarded to David Ahenakew
Historical note:
David Ahenakew (born July 28, 1933) is a Canadian First Nations politician, and former National Chief of the Assembly of First Nations. Ahenakew is a controversial public figure in Canada due to anti-semetic comments regarding World War 2 and the Holocaust.Our Health Counts: Urban Indigenous Health Database Project: Community Report: Inuit Adults, City of Ottawa
Our National Competitiveness and Canada's Territories
"Our Next Generation": Moving Towards a Surveillance and Prevention Framework for Youth Suicide in Saskatchewan First Nations and Métis Populations
Our Women and Girls Are Sacred: Interim Report: The National Inquiry into Missing and Murdered Indigenous Women and Girls
Out of Sight: A Summary of the Events Leading Up to Brian Sinclair's Death and the Inquest That Examined It and the Interim Recommendations of the Brian Sinclair Working Group
Over-represented But Not Understood: Sentencing Provisions as an Inadequate Response to the Over Incarceration of Aboriginal peoples in Nova Scotia
Overdose Data and First Nations in BC: Preliminary Findings
Paddling Together: Co-Governance Models for Regional Cumulative Effects Management
Parent Toolkit to Support Parental Support for Education: Draft for Review and Feedback
Participation in the Traditional Economy in Northern Saskatchewan: The 21st Century Landscape + Anohc Nehithawi Pimachesowin Ote Kiwetinohk Saskatchewan
Looks at the Northern Saskatchewan Indigenous communities participation in a traditional economy that complements their culture and values.
Partnerships in Procurement: Understanding Aboriginal Business Engagement in the Marine and Aerospace Industries in B.C.
Paths of Inquiry
Pathways for Indigenous Learners: Collaborating across Aboriginal Institutes, Colleges and Universities: Final Report
Pathways: Mentorship and Elder Guidance in Aboriginal Non-profit Organizations: A Handbook
Patterns in Contemporary Canadian Picture Books: Radical Change in Action
Peace and Friendship: Living with the Land
Interviews conducted with Alan Syliboy, Albert Marshall, Michelle Marshall-Johnson, Catherine Anne Martin, Morgan Toney, Gerald Gloade, and Michelle Syliboy.
Pemmican Empire: Food, Trade, and the Last Bison Hunts in the North American Plains, 1780-1882
"People Try and Label Me as Someone I'm Not": The Social Ecology of Indigenous People Living with HIV, Stigma, and Discrimination in Manitoba, Canada
La perception du carcajou/glouton par les Inuit du Nord canadien: Du passé au present
Perceptions and Practices of Principals: Supporting Positive Educational Experiences for Aboriginal Learners
Perceptions of and Experiences with Police and the Justice System among the Black and Indigenous Populations in Canada
The Perceptions of First Nations Participants in a Community Oral Health Initiative
Perceptions on Mobile Health use for Health Education in an Indigenous Population
Discusses how mobile health can help bridge the access gap to proper medical care and the various factors that need to be addressed when using it for Indigenous patients.
Permission: A Blood Reserve Sourcebook Drawn from Settler Records
Persistence of Colonial Prejudice and Policy in British Columbia's Indigenous Relations: Did the Spirit of Joseph Trutch Haunt Twentieth-Century Resource Development?
Perspectives of Accessing and Providing Prenatal Nutrition Care in a Rural First Nations Community: A Collaborative, Qualitative Case Study
Perspectives of Water and Health Using Photovoice with Youths Living on Reserve
Pimachesowin for the Sakha (Yakut) People of Northeastern Siberia + Кри норуот Пимачисуин өйдөбүлэ Сибиир хотугулуу-илин Саха норуотугар
Examines the parallels between the Sakha concept Aiyy Yorege and the Cree word Pimachesowin towards each group's journey to self-determination.