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American Indian and Alaska Native Mental Health
American Indian Theatre and Performance
American Indian Tribes’ Financial Accountability to the UnitedStates Government: Context, Procedures and Implications
Overview of methods used by U.S. government to move funds to tribes.
Chapter one from Setting the Agenda for Change, vol. 2, which is also vol. 2 in the Aboriginal Policy Research series.
Originally presented at the Aboriginal Policy Research Conference, 2002.
The Arctic Indigenous Language Initiative: Assessment, Promotion, and Collaboration
Assessing the Net Effects of Specific Claims Settlements in First Nations Communities in the Context of Community Well-Being
The Boarding School Experience in American Indian Literature
The City as a "Space of Opportunity": Urban Indigenous Experiences and Community Safety Partnerships
A Coyote Columbus Story
Humorous short story that tells the story of Columbus from an Indigenous point of view.
Excerpt from One Good Story, That One by Thomas King.
Dispersed But Not Destroyed: A History of the Seventeenth-Century Wendat People
Expressions of Policy Effects: Hearing Memories of Indian Residential Schools
Compares the treatment of Jewish people in the fictional story of Austerlitz by W. G. Sebald with children's experiences in residential schools in Canada, and Indian boarding schools in the United States.
Chapter from Productive Remembering and Social Agency edited by Teresa Strong-Wilson, Claudia Mitchell, Susann Allnutt, and Kathleen Pithouse-Morgan.
In-Between Worlds: Native Americans and Utopias of Belonging on Screen
Introduction [A Totem Pole History: The Work of Lummi Carver Joe Hillaire]
Mobile Architecture, Improvization and Museum Practice: Revitalizing the Tłįcho Caribou Skin Lodge
Norms of Consultation with Indigenous Peoples: Decentralization of International Law Formation or Reinforcement of States' Role?
Organizing Indigenous Governance in Canada, Australia, and the United States
Discusses issues such as differing perceptions of governance, scope of jurisdiction, who constitutes the "self" that is being governed, and questions of efficacy and legitimacy. Chapter ten from Moving Forward, Making a Difference, vol. 2, which is also vol. 4 in the Aboriginal Policy Research series. Originally presented at the second annual Aboriginal Policy Research Conference, 2006.
Performing Memory, Transforming Time: History and Indigenous North American Drama
The Transition from the Historical Inuit Suicide Pattern to the Present Inuit Suicide Pattern
Traces trends in Nunavut, Nunavik, Alaska, Greenland and the Circumpolar region, and discusses possible explanations for increases in the suicide rate.
Chapter three from Moving Forward, Making a Difference, vol. 2, which is also vol. 4 in the Aboriginal Policy Research series.
Originally presented at the second annual Aboriginal Policy Research Conference, 2006.