What Kind of Learning? For What Purpose?: Reflections on a Critical Adult Education Approach to Online Social Work and Education Courses Serving Indigenous Distance Learners
What Other Canadian Kids Have: The Fight for a New School in Attawapiskat
What's in a Name? The Politics of Labelling and Native Identity Constructions
What Strikes a Chord?: The Construction of Resonance in Collective Action Frames on Missing and Murdered Indigenous Women and Girls in Canada
What Their Stories Tell Us: Research Findings From the Sisters in Spirit Initiative
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 is Research Relevant to Policy Making? A Study of the Arctic Human Development Report
When Opportunity Knocks: Enhancing Professional Development For Nurses Within First Nations and Inuit Health Branch
When Research is Relational: Supporting the Research Practices of Indigenous Studies Scholars
When States Design: Making Space on Native Reserves
When the City Sleeps, We Dream of Disruption: A Review of Lisa Jackson's Transmissions Exhibition
When the Other Is Me: Native Resistance Discourse, 1850-1990
"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.
Where are Canada's Disappeared Women?
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 Does Policy Come From?: Exploring the Experiences of Non-Aboriginal Teachers Integrating Aboriginal Perspectives into the Curriculum
Where is Here?
Using their own personal reflections the author looks at Ontario Indigenous land claims and its impact into modern times.
[Where the Blood Mixes]
Where the Blood Mixes by Kevin Loring: Study Guide
Where the Waters Divide: Environmental Justice, Neoliberalism, and Aboriginal Voices. An Ethnography of the Changing Canadian Water Sector
Where to from Here: Building a First Nations Early Childhood Strategy: A Dialogue Initiative Undertaken by the Assembly of First Nations: Discussion Paper
The White Man's Gonna Getcha: The Colonial Challenge to the Crees in Québec
The White People Problem: Experiments in the Reverse Gaze.
White Picket Fences: Whiteness, Urban Aboriginal Women and Housing Market Discrimination in Kelowna, British Columbia
Who Is a Status Indian?
Who is artinjun.ca?
Who Is Missing? A Study of Missing Persons in B.C.
Who We Are Is Where We Come From: A Historical Curriculum Resource For The Pic Mobert First Nation
Whose “Distinctive Culture”?: Aboriginal Feminism and R. v. Van der Peet
Whose Land Is It? Rethinking Sovereignty in British Columbia
“Whose voices are not in the room?” Indigenous Women’s Participation in the Arctic Climate Crisis Research
Why an Aboriginal Public School? A Report To the Prince George School District No. 57 Aboriginal Education Board
Why Are We Settling? Indigenous Cultural Safety Education for Counsellors in Ontario
Kinesiology Thesis (PhD) -- Queen's University, 2020.
Why Is Adoption Like a First Nations’ Feast?: Lax Kw’alaam Indigenizing Adoptions in Child Welfare
Why Make Movies?: Some Atikamekw Answers
Why Privatization of Reserve Lands Risks Aboriginal Ruin
Argues that the proposal by the federal government to privatize reserve lands is short sighted and not for the greater good of the Aboriginal population.
Entire issue on one pdf. To access article scroll to p.12.
Why Terra Nullius? Anthropology and Property Law in Early Australia
Why the World Needs to Watch: The Canadian Government Held to Account for Racial Discrimination Against Indigenous Children before the Canadian Human Rights Tribunal
Wicihitowin: Aboriginal Social Work in Canada
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.