Cree Hunter Standing by Tree
Cree Mother Loses Organ Harvest Fight
Relates how a non-Aboriginal parent's right to harvest organs and cremate an adoptive son superseded a Cree biological mother's right to bury her adult son according to First Nation spiritual and cultural beliefs.
Entire issue on one pdf. To access article scroll to p.1.
A Critical Understanding of Adult Learning, Education and Training Using Information and Communication Technologies (ICT) in Remote First Nations
Cross-Cultural Analysis of Navajo Children's Attraction to Physical Activity and Perceived Parental Socialization Influences
Cross-Cultural Communication in Social Work Practice: An Interpretive Descriptive Approach to Cross-Cultural Communication Difficulties
Crossing Borders: Cultivating a Cohesive Society on the Adams River
Crown and Aboriginal Occupations of Land: A History & Comparison
Cultivating Common Ground: Cultural Revitalization in Anishinaabe and Anthropological Discourse
A Cultural Framework For Cree Self-Government: Retracing Our Steps Back
Cultural Guide to American Indian Tribes in Montana and Wyoming
Cultural Literacy, First Nations and the Future of Canadian Literary Studies
The Cultural Metamorphosis of Cree Education
Cultural Sovereignty and Native American Hermeneutics in the Interpretation of the Sacred Stories of the Anishinaabe
Culture and Education Among the Ditidaht: Reflecting on Sacredness, Origins, and Language
Culture and the Forested Landscape: Inter and Intra-Cultural Perceptions of Modified Forest Landscapes
Curators Talk: A Conversation
Current Health Services, Chapter 3
Current Issues in Mental Health in Canada: The Mental Health of First Nations and Inuit Communities
Current Status and Future Directions of Traditional Ecological Knowledge in Forest Management: A Review
"Cypress Hills Massacre, 1934-1967"
Historical note:
Dahcotah, or, Life and Legends of the Sioux around Fort Snelling
The Dakota of the Canadian Northwest: Lessons for Survival (Book Review)
Dancer at Prince Albert Totem Pole Ceremony
Dances With 'Religion': A Critical History of the Strategic Uses of the Category of Religion by the Government of Canada and First Nations, 1885 to 1951
Dancing the Rice: Aboriginal Self-Government is the Community Reclaiming Traditional Cultural Values Mnoomini-Gaawin: Nishinaabe Gimaawin na Dani-Daapinaawaa Nishinaabe oodenoo
Data Colonialism in Canada's Chemical Valley: Aamjiwnaang First Nation and the Failure of the Pollution Notification System
Discusses the area of Ontario where 40 percent of Canada's petrochemicals are processed and refined and where full information about events such as spills, flares, air releases, and even everyday cumulative exposures is not supplied to the First Nation due to the industry-governed notification system and inadequate regulatory legislation.
David Montgomery: The Quinault Indian Nation's Q-munity Roadmap
De/Scribing Squ*w: Indigenous Womenand Imperial Idioms in the United States
Death by Suicide: Community Responses to Maliseet Language Death at Tobique First Nation, New Brunswick, Canada
Deaths of Children puts Child Welfare System in Hot Seat
Reports on an investigation by Mary Ellen Turpel-Lafond, into the deaths of four children in British Columbia which questions the child welfare system.
Entire issue on one pdf. To access article scroll to p.5.
Debating the Origins of Democracy: Overview of an Annotated Bibliography
Debewewin Jury Review Implementation Committee: Final Report
The Decade of Education for Sustainable Development (DESD) and Sustainability Education in First Nations Schools in Manitoba
A Declaration of Indian Rights: The BC Indian Position Paper (excerpt)
Declaration of the Lillooet Tribe (May 10, 1911)
Decolonizing Colonial Violence: The Subversive Practices of Aboriginal Film and Video
Decolonizing Health in Canada: A Manitoba First Nation Perspective
Reports results of 183 interviews and focus groups held between 2015 and 2015 in eight communities with a variety of health delivery systems, geographies, accessibilities and language groups. Four themes emerged: control of healthcare, traditional medicine and healing practices, community participation, and dealing with the impacts of colonization.