2022 Saskatoon Point-in-Time Homelessness Count
Of the 550 persons participating in count, 90.1% were Indigenous.
Related Material: Infographic.
2022 Silas E. Halyk, QC Visiting Scholar in Advocacy Lecture: Presentor: Donald Worme
Aboriginal Traditional Culture: Niyo Aski: A Basic Insight of the Lateral-Linear Processes within Modern Society
Addressing Racism in Prince Albert: Did Leo LaChance's Death Make an Impact?
Against "Improvement," Toward Relations: Meditations on a Prison Writing Program
Alvin Head: FSIN Citizen of the Year
Any Important Form: Louis Riel in Sculpture
Art Shaped by the North: Gary Natomagan
Artist Henry Beaudry
At the Cultural and Religious Crossroads: Sara Riel and the Grey Nuns in the Canadian Northwest, 1848-1883
Augmentation as Affixation in Athabaskan Languages
A Biography of Chief Walter P. Deiter
Bipolar Technology and Pebble Stone Artifacts : Experimentation in Stone Tool Manufacture
Bishops Back Call to Improve Race Relations in Prince Albert
Blackstone Singers Win Contemporary World Championships
Book Review
A Brief History and Potential Future Vision for Additions to Reserves
Building a Tipi: Video Series
Canadian Studies: A Bibliography for History 30, Native Studies 30, and Social Studies 30
Capturing Women: The Manipulation of Cultural Imagery in Canada's Prairie West
Celebrating Our Path of Ahkamimoh in Northern Saskatchewan: Developing Resiliency in Youth through Education + Emocikihtayak Ahkamimohwin meskanaw Ote Kiwetinohk Saskatchewan: Sohkeyimowin Oskayak Ekiskinwahamacik
Examines the importance of a community-based education to enhance Indigenous resilience to the impact of colonization and residential schools.
Chiefs-in-Assembly Ratify New FSIN Structure
Community and Public Health Responses to a COVID-19 Outbreak in North-west Saskatchewan: Challenges, Successes, and Lessons Learned
Looks at the multi-level collaboration of government officials and Indigenous communities to minimize the effects of COVID pandemic.
Community Language Planning Guide
Business History Review, Vol. 60, Spring 1986, pp. 151-154
Cover Artist: Lorne Cappo
COVID 19 Employee Handbook: Return to Work
Cultural Change as a Result of Trade Relations in the Parklands of Central Saskatchewan
The Cultural Concept of Crime among Urban Natives: An Interpretive Schema
The Development of Native Studies at Canadian Universities: Four Programs, Four Provinces, Four Decades
Differing Visions: Administering Indian Residential Schooling in Prince Albert, 1867-1995
Digging Roots and Remembering Relatives: Lakota Kinship and Movement in the Northern Great Plains from the Wood Mountain Uplands across Lakóta Tȟamákȟočhe/Lakota Country, 1881-1940
History Thesis (PhD) -- University of Alberta, 2022.
Dr. Oliver Brass: In Remembrance
Economic Development Among First Nations: A Contingency Perspective
"Educational Paternalism" Versus Autonomy: Contradictions in the Relationship Between the Saskatchewan Government and the Federation of Saskatchewan Indians, 1958-1964
An Elder's View of Powwow
Elicitation and Analysis of Nakoda Texts From Southern Saskatchewan
Enquête sur la Revendication de la Première Nation de Fishing Lake Relativement à la Cession de 1907
Enquête sur la Revendication de la Première Nation de Kahkewistahaw Relative à la Cession de Terres de Réserve en 1907
Ethnoarchaeology of Subsistence Space and Gender: A Subarctic Dene Case
Ethnobotany of Two Cree Communities in the Southern Boreal Forest of Saskatchewan
"Even the Youngest Can Help": The First World War, Girls and the Junior Red Cross in Western Canada
Facilitating Community Participation in Health Needs Assessment
Faunal Analysis of the Sanderson Site (DhMs-12), Block Seven West
Federal Government Settles with Abuse Victims
Discusses how, even as former Gordon Indian Residential School sexual abuse victims attain settlement with the federal government for the abuse endured, the after-effects continue to impact the personal lives of First Nations people.
Entire issue on one pdf. To access article scroll to p.2.
File Hills Internet Officially Launched
First Nation's Historical Centre for Tourism and Education
Discusses the First Nation owned and operated Chief Poundmaker Historical Centre and Tee-Pee Village which is open to welcome history buffs, campers, and community groups.
Entire issue on one pdf. To view article scroll to p. 18 of the special insert Windspeaker's Guide to Indian Country.