Kikkik
"Kill the Indian, Save the Man": A Young Oneida Man's Perspective on Sexuality
Killing the Policy to Save the Child: Comparing the Historical Removal of Indigenous Children in Australia to the United States and How the Countries Can Learn From Each Other
kimotinâniwiw itwêwina = Stolen Words Written by Melanie Florence; Illustrated by Gabrielle Grimard: Guide to the Plains Cree Edition
Story about a little Cree girl who helps her grandfather regain his language after he tells her about his experience of residential school, separation from his family and culture and loss of language.
Suitable for use with students aged 9-13 (Grades 4-7) who have completed three or more years of Cree language instruction.
Kin-fused Reconciliation: Bringing Them Home, Bringing us Home
Kindergarten Transitions II: A Scan of Existing Supportive Programs for Aboriginal Children and Families in British Columbia: Final Paper
Kindreds and States: Using Anglo-Saxon and Gitxsan Law to Help Reconcile Aboriginal and Crown Sovereignty
Kinosao Sipi Minisowin Agency: Creating a Community
Response for Special Needs Children
Clarence Paupanekis
Kinship and Identity: Mixed Bloods in Urban Indian Communities
Kinship and Settlements: Sami Residence Patterns in the Fennoscandian Alpine Areas Around A.D. 1000
Kinship and Social Organization Among the Great Bear Lake Indians: A Cultural Decision-Making Model
Anthropology Thesis (PhD) - University of Arizona, 1977.
Kinship and the Drum Dance in a Northern Dene Community
Kinship and the Drum Dance in a Northern Dene Community
Kinship as Cosmology: Potatoes as Offspring Among the Aymara of Highland Bolivia
Kinship Care
Kinship Care: A Community Alternative to Foster Care
Kinship Care Review Report
The Kinship Conundrum: The Impact of Aboriginal Self-Determination on Indigenous Child Protection
Kinship, Exchange, and Ethnicity Among Dolgan and Nganasan of Northern Siberia
Kinship, Family, and Exchange in a Labrador Inuit Community
Kinship Terms and Cross-Cousin Marriage of the Montagnais-Naskapi and the Cree
Kinshipwrecking: John Smith’s Adoption and the Pocahontas Myth in Settler Ontologies
kiskinohamâtôtâpânâsk: Inter-generational Effects on Professional First Nations Women Whose Mothers are Residential School Survivors
Knitting and Basket-Making Receives an Official Nod
Comments on the designation of Cowichan sweaters and Nlaka'pamux basket making as Aboriginal items of national historic significance by the Historic Sites and Monuments Board of Canada.
Page 4 of insert entitled Raven's Eye: Special Section Providing News from BC & Yukon.
A Knock on the Door: The Essential History of Residential Schools From the Truth and Reconciliation Commission of Canada
Kohkum Would Be Mad At Me
The Komatik Lesson
The Komi of the Kola Peninsula
Koniag Ceremonialism: An Archaeological and Ethnohistoric Analysis of Sociopolitical Complexity and Ritual Among the Pacific Eskimo
Kónitsąąíí gokíyaa Ndé: 'Big Water People's Homeland' a Shadow of Self-Determination in a Bifurcated Traditional Territory
Koora the Kangaroo: Violence Prevention at Woorabinda State School: Evaluation Report
Looks at the school-based family violence prevention program based on the concept that Aboriginal identity is a positive life force. Uses a mascot, original stories, school-based visits from community members and teachers resource package.
[The Koryak]: Material Culture and Social Organization
Kumeyaay Basketry: Resource Management as an Economic Strategy
Kupai Omasker: Incorporating Traditional Adoption Practices into Australia's Family Law System
Kuper Island: Return to the Healing Circle
Kwaio Fosterage
Kwin Tsaniine Das Delh (Returning to the Home Fire): An Indigenous Reclamation
Labour Market Study: A Community-Based Research Report for Mamaweswen: The North Shore Tribal Council, Naadmaadwuiik, Saulteaux Enterprises, and the Aboriginal Human Resource Development Agreement
Researchers used four methodological approaches to address the requirement of the project goals: labour market survey, focus groups, interviews, and consultation with Serpent River First Nation.