Community-led Recovery from the Opioid Crisis through Culturally-based Programs and Community-based Data Governance
Examines the community-based opioid agonist treatment (OAT) program Naandwe Miikan (The Health Path).
Examines the community-based opioid agonist treatment (OAT) program Naandwe Miikan (The Health Path).
Examines the role of Métis filmmakers in the creation of a Métis Storywork methodology.
Examines how culture helped shape the experiences of Indigenous populations during the COVID pandemic.
Looks at Indigenous women reconnecting with their own culture.
Examines the response to the COVID pandemic by Canadian Indigenous communities as an example of their continued resilience.
Using interviews with first-language speaking Elders to improve the understanding of Indigenous worldviews on health and well-being in order to improve health programs within Indigenous communities.
Looks at the arctic indigenous communities participation and perspectives on the ethical guidelines regarding research amongst their populations.
Examines the changes to the delivery of Indigenous land based services to urban Indigenous communities during the COVID pandemic.
A literature review on Indigenous fathers and their impact on the health of Indigenous children.
An audio-visual learning tool about the use of Indigenous knowledge and customs by social workers as a means of healing for Indigenous populations.
Link included to the accompanying video on Youtube. (23:32)
Examines the combining of adventure, culture and, land as tools for healing Indigenous trauma across the world.
Reviews the use of traditional health interventions amongst Indigenous populations.
Discusses possible changes to the legal system through Indigenous pedagogies.
Examines five approaches to Indigenizes Canadian universities curriculum's by discussing the pros and cons of each approach.
A personal reflection on the author balancing their Métis ancestry and their academic career.
A personal reflection by a Métis elder on traditional Michif food.
Discusses the barriers to healthy active living for Indigenous mothers from the Six Nations of the Grand River.
Examines personal reflections of two 2SLGBTQ+ Métis people and their roles towards decolonization.
A personal reflection on providing a Métis perspective to land acknowledgments.
Looks at the research on Métis spirituality and how it relates to their nationhood.
Examines the ideas of rest and art being used to combat the effects of colonization.
Examines the use of Métis women-specific methodology to improve research within Métis communities.
Reviews reforms made by the Canadian Institutes of Health Research (CIHR) to their Open Suite of Programs and Peer Review (OSP) processes and its impact on Indigenous health research.
An examination of the story and the discourse on the Battle of Seven Oaks using an examining of the primary sources of the time.
Discusses the need for Métis centered approached to feminism to create a new form of knowledge.
Discusses the impact of the COVID pandemic on the two-spirit Indigenous populations in Atlantic Canada and how the response of the Wabanaki Two-Spirit Alliance (W2SA).
Examines how the use of the Indigenous four Rs outside of the scope of research but rather applied to wellness practices that effects the Indigenous population.
Examines the experiences of 13 Métis women and the passing down of their knowledge for future generations.
Reports on health statistics for Indigenous populations and the need for the collection of statistics that acknowledge Indigenous worldviews and practices.
Discusses a braid approach intervention, a combination of different Indigenous practices, as ways to address the needs of Indigenous youth suffering from mental health issues.