Intertribal Agriculture Council Perspectives on the History and Current Status of American Indian Agriculture
An Interview with Susan Point
Interviews With Loretta Todd, Shelley Niro and Patricia Deadman
"Intratribal Cooperation and Communications: Is Consensus Possible?"
Introduction
An introduction to a special issue on climate change and its effects on arctic communities. For English scroll down to page 15.
Introduction
Introduction: Fraud in Native American Communities: Essays in Honor of Suzan Shown Harjo
Introduction: Media And Aboriginal Culture; An Evolving Relationship
Introduction: Rethinking Blackness and Indigeneity in the Light of Settler Colonial Theory
Introduction: The North and the First World War
Introduction to the Special Issue: Reconciling Research: Perspectives on Research Involving Indigenous Peoples
An Intrusive and Corrective Government: Political Rationalities and the Governance of the Plains Aboriginals, 1870-1890
Inuit Attitudes towards Co-Managing Wildlife in Three Communities in the Kivalliq Region of Nunavut, Canada
The Inuit Food System: Ecological, Economic and the Environmental Dimensions of the Nutrition Transition
Inuit Girls Make Media: Resisting Stereotypes through Participatory Research
Inuit Interpreters Engaged in End-of-Life Care in Nunavik, Northern Quebec
Inuit Knowledge of Long-Term Changes in a Population of Arctic Tundra Caribou
Inuit Language Loss in Nunavut: Analysis, Forecast, and Recommendations
Inuit Nunangat Region Community Well-Being Scores by Census Year [1981-2016]
Inuit: One Future, One Arctic
Inuit Participation in the Wage and Land-based Economies of Inuit Nunangat
Inuit Perceptions of Learning and Formal Education in the Canadian Arctic
Inuit Post-Contact History
The Inuit Sky
Inuit Stories of Being and Rebirth: Gender, Shamanism, and the Third Sex
Inuktitut in Ontario: Best Practices Research Report
Iñupiaq Phrasebook
Invasion to Embassy: Land in Aboriginal Politics in New South Wales, 1770-1972.
Investigating Disease Experience in Aboriginal Populations in Canada: The 1918 Influenza Pandemic in Berens River and Poplar River, Manitoba
Anthropology Thesis (MA) -- McMaster University, 1998.
Investigating Māori Approaches to Trauma Informed Care
Investigating the Advantages of Constructing Multidigit Numeration Understanding Through Oneida and Lakota Native Languages
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.
Investing in Canada's Future Prosperity: An Economic Opportunity for Canadian Industries: Methods and Sources Paper
Is Immersion the Key to Language Renewal?
Is Urban a Person or a Place? Characteristics of Urban Indian Country
Iskigamizigedaa: Let's Boil Maple Sugar
Colouring storybook features a grandparent and grandchildren engaging in conversations about traditional teachings, when to begin and end harvesting, the equipment used, and processing and use of maple sugar. Text in English with some Ojibwe words interspersed.
The Issue of Indigenous Underrepresentation in Canadian Criminal Juries
Issues in the North, vol. 3
Issues in Urban Corrections for Aboriginal People: Report on a Focus Group and an Overview of the Literature and Experience
It Consumes What It Forgets
It Happened as if Overnight: The Expropriation and Relocation of Stoney Point Reserve # 43, 1942
“It’s All about the Scenery”: Tourists’ Perceptions of Cultural Ecosystem Services in the Lofoten Islands, Norway
"It's huge in First Nation culture for us, as a school, to be a role model": Facilitators and Barriers Affecting School Nutrition Policy Implementation in Alexander First Nation
It's Not Easy Speaking Bizarro Languages
Humorous article regarding the difficulties encountered when trying to use Ojibway to fulfil the second language requirement at a Canadian university.
Entire issue on one pdf. To access article scroll to p.11.
It's Okay To Be Native: Alaska Native Cultural Strategies in Urban and School Settings
It Sometimes Speaks to Us: Decolonizing Education by Utilizing Our Elders' Knowledge
Ithaka S+R Report Research Support Services for the Field of Indigenous Studies: A Local Report by the University of Toronto Libraries
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.