Gáan: Berries
Primary science unit also teaches associated words and phrases in Haida. Suitable for Grades K-1.
The Gender Gap In Higher Education In Alaska
Gender, Subsistence, Change, and Resilience in Quinhagak’s Present and Past
Examines archeological evidence and interviews to learn how the Yup'ik adapted to changes in their environmental and social world.
Gin Xilaa: Plants
Ethnobotany lesson plan also teaches associated Haida words and phrases. Suitable for Grades K-2.
Accompanying Material: Teacher Resources.
The Girl Who Lived with the Bears
Retelling of traditional Tlingit story. Lesson plan for Grades 4-6.
Related Material: Teacher resource including Tlingit language wall cards, retelling materials, transformation story elements, reader's theatre script for The Woman Who Married a Bear, and calendar icons.
A Grammar of Iñupiaq Morphosyntax
Guidelines for German Museums: Car of Collections from Colonial Contexts
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.
Harm Reduction Toolkit
Harm Reduction Toolkit
Haunted by Empire: Geographies of Intimacy in North American History
Health Care Utilisation Changes among Alaska Native Adults After Participation in an Indigenous Community Programme to Address Adverse Life Experiences: A Propensity Score-matched Analysis
Hepatitis C in Pregnant American Indian and Alaska Native Women; 2003-2015
High Alaskan Adventure
Historical Continuity from Shemya to Dutch Harbor: An Evolutionary Analysis of Chipped Stone Technology in the Aleutian Islands
Homelessness across Alaska, the Canadian North and Greenland: A Review of the Literature on a Developing Social Phenomenon in the Circumpolar North
How Raven Marked the Land When the Earth Was New
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.
Hunted and Honoured: Animal Representations in Precontact Masks from the Nunalleq Site, Southwest Alaska
Using archaeological data to better understand the role of animals in precontact Yup'ik communities.
Identifying Barriers to Healthcare Delivery and Access in the Circumpolar North: Important Insights for Health Professionals
Infectious Disease Hospitalizations among Older American Indian and Alaska Native Adults
Integrating Culture Into Education: Self-Concept Formation in Alaska Native Youth
Introduction: The North and the First World War
Inuit Symbolism of the Bearded Seal
Inupiat Youth Suicide and Culture Loss: Changing Community Conversations for Prevention
Investigating the Utility of Birds in Precontact Yup'ik Subsistence: A Preliminary Analysis of the Avian Remains from Nunalleq
Highlights the important role of birds for precontact Yup'ik as a soruce of food and material culture.
Ivory versus Antler: A Reassessment of Binary Structuralism in the Study of Prehistoric Eskimo Cultures
Kayaaní: Plants
Science unit also teaches Tlingit vocabulary. Lesson plan intended for use with Grades K-5.
Accompanying Material: Teacher Resources.
Knowledge Co-production in Contested Spaces: An Evaluation of the North Slope Borough – Shell Baseline Studies Program
Learning Resistance: Inupiat and the US Bureau of Education, 1885-1906 - Deconstructing Assimilation Strategies and Implications for Today
Lingít Yoo X̲ʼatángi Beginning Tlingit Workbook
Linking Indigenous Communities with Regional Development
"Must We All Die?": Alaska's Enduring Struggle with Tuberculosis
The National Eye Health Education Program: Increasing Awareness of Diabetic Eye Disease [DED] Among American Indians and Alaska Natives
Never Alone: (Re)Coding the Comic Holotrope of Survivance
Never Alone: The Art and the People of the Story
New Isotope Evidence for Diachronic and Site-Spatial Variation in Precontact Diet during the Little Ice Age at Nunalleq, Southwest Alaska
Using archeological data to examine the changes of the Yup'ik diet during different time periods and what those changes can tell about Yup'ik history.
Northern Literature: Look Here, Look Again
Northwest Coast Indian Art: An Analysis of Form (50th Anniversary Edition)
Nunalleq: Archaeology, Climate Change, and Community Engagement in a Yup'ik Village
Oil and the Iñupiaq: Linking Industry and Education at Iļisaġvik College
"The Old Village": Yup'ik Precontact Archaeology and Community-Based Research at the Nunalleq Site, Quinhagak, Alaska
Examines the use of community-based archaeology in response to the destruction of archaeological heritage sites due to climate change.
One Health in the Circumpolar North
One Writer, Becoming
Oral Health Beliefs and Oral Hygiene Behaviours among Parents of Urban Alaska Native Children
Pacific Salmon in the Rapidly Changing Arctic: Exploring Local Knowledge and Emerging Fisheries in Utqiaġvik and Nuiqsut, Alaska
The Participial Oblique, A Verb Mood Found Only in Nunivak Central Alaskan Yup'ik and In Siberian Yupik
Plants and Connection to Place
Focuses on Yukon First Nations Traditional Knowledge.