Reaffirming Cultural Identity: A Case Study of Stó:lō Pithouse Reconstructions
Rebuilding First Nations: Tools, Traditions and Relationships
Reclaiming Symbols and History in Multiple Zones: Experiencing Coast Salish Culture and Identity Through Performance at Hiwus>/i> Feasthouse
Recycling the Soul: Death and the Continuity of Life in Coast Salish Burial Practices
A Reference Guide to the Establishment of Indian Reserves In British Columba, 1849-1911
Referendum in B.C. Doesn't Mean Much
Resistance, Coercion, and Revitalization: The Shuswap Encounter with Roman Catholic Missionaries, 1860-1900
Retention Factors for First Nations Students in the Public School System of British Columbia
Rethinking Precolonial Plant Cultivation on the Northwest Coast of North America
Reviving Kwak'wala Language
Risk Factors and Determinants of HIV and Hepatitis C Prevalence and Incidence Among a Cohort of Young Injection Drug Users
Seepeetza Revisited: An Introduction to Six Voices
The Self Government Landscape
Self Government: The Ktunaxa/Kinbasket Experience: Speaking Notes for Chief Sophie Pierre, St. Mary's Indian Band, Administrator Ktunaxa/Kinbasket Tribal Council
Sharing the Story: Experiences of Six Communities
Sit Down and Drink Your Beer: Regulating Vancouver's Beer Parlours, 1925-1954
Social and Economic Impacts of Aboriginal Land Claim Settlements: A Case Study Analysis: Final Report
Source Water Characteristics and the Incidence of Gastroeneteritis in Aboriginal Communities
Speaking Truth to Power III: Self-Government: Options and Opportunities, March 14 - 15, 2002
A Statistical Report on the Health of First Nations in British Columbia
Information compiled from a number of sources, including Medical Services Branch, the Department of Indian Affairs, divisions of the Provincial Ministry of Health including Hospital Programs and Vital Statistics, and the 1991 Statistics Canada Aboriginal Peoples Survey (APS).
A Sto:lo-Coast Salish Historical Atlas
The Storied World of Harry Robinson: Emerging Dialogues
Stories are Maps, Songs are Caches and Trails: The Verbal Art of Haayas, Kingagwaaw, Gumsiiwa, Ghandl and Skaay - Five Master Mythtellers From Haida Gwaii
Part I: Skaay of the Qquuna Qiighawaay
'A Strange Revolution in the Manners of the Country': Aboriginal-Settler Intermarriage in Nineteenth-Century British Columbia
Studies in Southern Wakashan (Nootkan) Grammar
Success Factors That Helped First Nation Students Complete Their University Degrees
Counselling Psychology Thesis (M.A.)--University of British Columbia, 2002.
The Supreme Law and The Grand Law: Changing Significance of Customary Law For Aboriginal Women of British Columbia
Sustainable Community Economic Development [SCED] in a Coastal Context: The Case of Alert Bay, British Columbia
Taking Control: Power and Contradiction in First Nations Adult Education
Tangled Webs of History: Indians and the Law in Canada's Pacific Coast Fisheries
Tangled Webs of History: Indians and the Law in Canada's Pacific Coast Fisheries
Taxation and Representation: Non-Native Leaseholders on Indian Reserves
Teacher's Guide: From Time Immemorial: The First Peoples of the Pacific Northwest
"Now contains an expanded unit on treaty making and self government in British Columbia".
Social Studies Grades 4-8.
This Blessed Wilderness: Archibald McDonald's Letters from Columbia, 1822-44
Time, Space, and the People of God: Anglican Colonialism in Nineteenth-Century British Columbia
Towards an Art History of Northwest Coast First Nations: 2. Transitional Period (1870-1930)
Towards an Art History of Northwest Coast First Nations: 3. Contemporary Period (1930-present)
Towards an Art History of Northwest Coast First Nations: A Review Essay of Recent Literature
Towards an Art History of Northwest Coast First Nations: I."Traditional" Period (1770-1870)
Traditional Environmental Knowledge in Practice
Treaty Making in British Columbia: A Short History
Treaty Referendum Questions Called 'Ridiculous'
Questions a referendum proposed by B. C. treaty negotiators, arguing that the rights of a minority (First Nations) were being placed in front of a majority (constituents) and that some questions asked address rights already affirmed in Canadian courts and the Constitution.
Entire issue on one pdf. To access article scroll to p.11.