The Impact of Treaty4Project on Students and Teachers: Learning From Our Experience
Impacting Community Strength and Sustainability: Community-Campus Engagement and Poverty Reduction at Station 20 West Community Enterprise Centre
Implementation Assessment and Outcome Evaluation Planning for the Restorative Action Program (RAP)
[Improving First Nations and Métis Health Outcomes: A Call to Collaborative Action]
Improving the Economic Success of Urban Additions to Reserves: Achieving Benefits for First Nations and Local Governments: Stage II Economic and Fiscal Benefits Generated in Urban ATRs
Improving the Economic Success of Urban Additions to Reserves: Stage 1: Identifying Success Factors in Urban First Nations
Indian Summer Games Now On
Indigenous Women and Sexual Assault in Canada
Instruments of Incorporation: Rangers, Mounties, and the North American Frontier, 1875-1910
Integrating Aboriginal Peoples Into Canada's Casino Industry
The Interpersonal Skills of Community-Engaged Scholarship: Insights From Collaborators Working at the University of Saskatchewan’s Community Engagement Office
Investing in Canada's Future Prosperity: An Economic Opportunity for Canadian Industries: Methods and Sources Paper
“It Happened More Than Once”: Freezing Deaths in Saskatchewan
J. Z. LaRocque: A Métis Historian’s Account of His Family’s Experiences during the North-West Rebellion of 1885
Discusses Joseph Zépherin LaRocque, born in Lebret, Saskatchewan, who was one of the very few Métis vernacular historians writing in the early 20th century.
Jemmy Jock Bird: Marginal Man on the Blackfoot Frontier
Jocelyn Reekie
"Just a Pepper in a Bunch of Salt": Aboriginal Students' Stories of School
"Just a Pepper in a Bunch of Salt": Aboriginal Students' Stories of School
Kitaskinaw: An Environmental Scan of Programs and Services Serving Aboriginal People in Saskatoon, 2013-2014 [Inventory]
Kitaskinaw: An Environmental Scan of Programs and Services Serving Aboriginal People in Saskatoon, 2013-2014 [Summary]
Know Your Status: A Tool Kit for HIV Programs in Saskatchewan First Nations
Brief discussion of community engagement and readiness, education, harm reduction, testing, treatment, client support and case management, and surveillance.
The Labor Market and Rural-Urban Differences Among First Nations: The Case of Saskatchewan
Lac La Ronge Indian Band: Pursing pimâcihowin (making a living) to Achieve mitho-pimâtisiwin (the good life)
Land-Titles Fiasco Hurts First Nations
Landmark: A Publication of the Indian Claims Commission (Vol. 8, No.4 Winter 2003)
Landmark: A Publication of the Indian Claims Commission (Vol. 9, No. 2, Summer 2003)
The Language of Métis Folk Houses
Lawful Subversion of the Criminal Justice Process? Judicial, Prosecutorial, and Police Discretion in Edmondson, Kindrat, and Brown
Learning Together: Str8Up, Oskayak High School, and the University of Saskatchewan: Final Report
Legacy of School for Aboriginal People: Education, Oppression, and Emancipation
The Light to the Left: Conceptions of Social Justice Among Christian Social Studies Teachers
Living Tensions of Co-Creating a Wellness Program and Narrative Inquiry alongside Urban Aboriginal Youth
The Long-Term Risks of End Stage Renal Disease and Mortality among First Nations and Non-First Nations People with Youth-Onset Diabetes
Lost in the System: Jake's Story
Managing the Forgotten North: Governance Structures and Administrative Operations of Canada's Provincial Norths
Many Positives for Natives in Election Result
[Maskihkiyiwan nehiyawewin: Re-igniting the Fire]
Masquerade and Modernity in the Cypress Hills: Performing Prairie Photography in the Late 1870s
Medicine That Walks: Disease, Medicine, and Canadian Plains Native People, 1880-1940
Book review of: Medicine That Walks by Maureen K. Lux.
Medicine That Walks: Disease, Medicine, and Canadian Plains People, 1880-1940
[Michif Language Resources: An Annotated Bibliography]
Minister Accused of Abuse of Power
Contends that the Indian Affairs Minister, Robert Nault, has dealt punitively with First Nations chiefs that have not agreed with his proposals and so the chiefs will be taking their complaints to the ethics commissioner, the Speaker of the House of Commons, the Auditor General of Canada and the Prime Minister.
Entire issue on one pdf. To access article scroll to p.3.
Mistawasin [Mistawasis] Pow Wow Aug. 23 2003. - Slides.
Historical note:
The Mistawasis First Nation is located approximately 68 kilometres west of the city of Prince Albert, Saskatchewan. The Nation has one reserve with an area of approximately 125.44 square kilometres. The First Nation takes its name from the name of its first chief, Chief Mistawasis. Mistawasis, or "Big Child" in English, was the first person to sign Treaty 6 in 1876.Mistawasin [Mistawasis] Pow Wow Aug. 23 2003. - Slides.
Historical note:
The Mistawasis First Nation is located roughly 68 kilometres west of the city of Prince Albert, Saskatchewan. The Nation has one reserve with an area of approximately 125.44 square kilometres. The First Nation takes its name from the name of its first chief, Chief Mistawasis. Mistawasis, or "Big Child" in English, was the first person to sign Treaty 6 in 1876.Mistawasin [Mistawasis] Pow Wow Aug. 24 2003. - Slide.
Historical note:
The Mistawasis First Nation is located roughly 68 kilometres west of the city of Prince Albert, Saskatchewan. The Nation has one reserve with an area of approximately 125.44 square kilometres. The First Nation takes its name from the name of its first chief, Chief Mistawasis. Mistawasis, or "Big Child" in English, was the first person to sign Treaty 6 in 1876.Mistawasin [Mistawasis] Pow Wow Aug. 24 2003. - Slide.
Historical note:
The Mistawasis First Nation is located roughly 68 kilometres west of the city of Prince Albert, Saskatchewan. The Nation has one reserve with an area of approximately 125.44 square kilometres. The First Nation takes its name from the name of its first chief, Chief Mistawasis. Mistawasis, or "Big Child" in English, was the first person to sign Treaty 6 in 1876.Mistawasin [Mistawasis] Pow Wow Aug. 24 2003. - Slide.
Historical note:
The Mistawasis First Nation is located roughly 68 kilometres west of the city of Prince Albert, Saskatchewan. The Nation has one reserve with an area of approximately 125.44 square kilometres. The First Nation takes its name from the name of its first chief, Chief Mistawasis. Mistawasis, or "Big Child" in English, was the first person to sign Treaty 6 in 1876.Mistawasin [Mistawasis] Pow Wow Aug. 24 2003. - Slide.
Historical note:
The Mistawasis First Nation is located roughly 68 kilometres west of the city of Prince Albert, Saskatchewan. The Nation has one reserve with an area of approximately 125.44 square kilometres. The First Nation takes its name from the name of its first chief, Chief Mistawasis. Mistawasis, or "Big Child" in English, was the first person to sign Treaty 6 in 1876.