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Aboriginal Management of Salmon in Canada and the United States: Expanding Environmental Justice
The Anthropology of Northwest Coast Oral Traditions
Beaten Down: A History of Interpersonal Violence in the West
Bringing Culture in: Community Responses to Apology, Reconciliation, and Reparations
Chíin: Salmon
Science unit also teaches Haida vocabulary. Intended for use with Grades K-1.
Accompanying Material: Teacher Resources.
Creating Choices: Rethinking Aboriginal Policy
Dances with Dependency: Out of Poverty through Self-Reliance
Disproportionate Representation and First Nations Child Welfare in Canada
Do Glaciers Listen? Local Knowledge, Colonial Encounters & Social Imagination
Emerging from the Mist: Studies in Northwest Coast Culture History
The Exploration of Northwest Coast Indian Art, 1774-2003
From Negative to Positive: B.A. Haldane, Nineteenth Century Tsimshian Photographer
Gáan: Berries
Primary science unit also teaches associated words and phrases in Haida. Suitable for Grades K-1.
Gin Xilaa: Plants
Ethnobotany lesson plan also teaches associated Haida words and phrases. Suitable for Grades K-2.
Accompanying Material: Teacher Resources.
The Grammatization of Telicity and Durativity in Dëne Suliné (Chipewyan) and German
Gyáa'aang: Totem Poles
Lesson teaches the cultural significance of totems poles, how they're constructed and Haida vocabulary relating to them. Designed for Grades K-1.
Accompanying Material: Teacher Resources.
Housing, Long Term Care Facilities, and Services for Homeless and Low-Income Urban Aboriginal People Living with HIV/AIDS
How Raven Stole the Sun
Retelling of a traditional Tlingit story also known as Box of Daylight or How Raven Brought Light to the World. Lesson plan intended for Grades K-5.
Related Material: Teacher Resource.
Human Versus Person: An Examination of Nature/Culture on the Northwest Coast
Indian Legends of the Pacific Northwest
Instruments of Incorporation: Rangers, Mounties, and the North American Frontier, 1875-1910
Justice, Law, and the Lens of Culture
Living on Display: Colonial Visions of Aboriginal Domestic Spaces
The Many Faces of Edward Sherriff Curtis: Portraits and Stories From Native North America
Māori and Museums: The Politics of Indigenous Recognition
Museums and Source Communities: A Routledge Reader
New Treaty, Same Old Problems
On The Politics of Indigeneity: North American and Pacific Histories
An Overview of Pacific Northwest Native Indian Art
Post-Secondary Quality Assurance Practices
Powerful or Just Plain Power-Full? A Power Analysis
of Impact and Benefit Agreements in Canada’s North
Raven Imagery in Northwest Coast Indian Art
Rights, Rituals, and Repercussions: Aboriginal Participation in the 2010 Olympic Games Planning Process
S'abadeb--The Gifts: Pacific Coast Salish Art and Artists
SKC Provides Online IT Classes at Crownpoint
Tale of an Alaska Whale
Retelling of traditional Tlingit story also known as Naatsilanéi, The Origin of the Killer Whale or Kéet Shagoon. Literature unit also teaches Tlingit vocabulary. Lesson plans intended for Grades K-5.
Accompanying Material: Teacher Resources.
The Transformative Power of T'xwelátse: A Collaborative Case Study in Search of New Approaches to Indigenous Cultural Repatriation Processes
"Trespassers on the Soil": United States v. Tom and a New Perspective on the Short History of Treaty Making in Nineteenth-Century British Columbia
Ts'úu isgyáan Sgahláang = Yellow and Red Cedar
Science unit also teaches the Haida language. Intended for Grades K-2.
Related Material: Teacher Resources.