"A better place to live": National Mythologies, Canadian History Textbooks, and the Reproduction of White Supremacy
Education Thesis (PhD) -- University of Ottawa, 2005.
Education Thesis (PhD) -- University of Ottawa, 2005.
From "A Very Remarkable Sickness": Epidemics in the Petit Nord, 1670 to 1846 by Paul Hacket.
Argues that the limitations of the medium or cultural materials and the offered resistance fuel the creative tension in the novel.
Includes brief case studies of police services in Tsuu T'ina, the Six Nations, the Akwesasne Mohawk, the Huron Wendake, the Timiskaming and the Whapmagoostui Cree.
Modules: First Peoples, Early European Colonization (1600 to 1763), Fur Trade, and From British Colony to Confederation (1763 to 1867).
Goal of initiative is to ensure that health systems are designed by, with and for Indigenous populations. Offers guidance on assessing level of community impact, selecting appropriate type and method of community engagement, developing engagenment and data sovereignty plans, and implementation of plan.
Children's storybook in Mi'kmaq and English. Contains links to audio of individual words or the entire page.
Anthropology Thesis (PhD) -- University of British Columbia, 2002.
Thirty-six articles from peer-reviewed journals and 18 reference documents were reviewed.
Looks at causes of depopulation after colonization between sixteenth century to the start of the twentieth century as well as the recovery starting in the 1900s.
Joint issue with: Indigenous Studies Today Issue 1, Spring 2006.
Recipes in Cree and English.
Statistics for populations changes, gender, age, education, type of framing activity and income.
History Thesis (PhD) -- Memorial University, 2002.
Education Thesis (MEd) -- University of Alberta, 1975