Insider and Outsider: An Inari Saami Case
The Insider-Outsider Dialectic in Native Socio-Economic Development: A Case Study in Process Understanding
"Inspector Dickens Journal" Fort Pitt, 1885.
Historical note:
Interactions Between Wage Employment and Subsistence Lifestyle: Oil Development on the North Slope, Alaska
Intercultural Dynamics of the Hopi-Navajo Land Dispute: Concepts of Colonialism and Manifest Destiny in the Southwest
Intercultural Identity in James Welch's Fools Crow and The Indian Lawyer
Interests and the Public Interest in Law and Public Policy: A Case Study in Aboriginal Policy in Canada
Interior of Fort Pitt, Just [Before] the Rebellion of 1885
International Day of the World's Indigenous People
Interview Tape #2 with Agnes Amyotte Fisher and Celina Amyotte Poitras
Interview with Agnes Amyotte Fisher and Celina Amyotte Poitras
Introducing Our Guest Editor in Western Australia
Introduction
Introduction
Introduction [Aboriginal Peoples and Canada]
Introduction [BC Studies, No. 95, Autumn, 1992]
Introduction [Studies in American Indian Literatures, Series 2, Vol. 7, No.3, Fall 1995]
Introduction [Studies in American Indian Literatures, Series 2, Vol. 7, No.4, Winter 1995]
Introduction to Document Six: The CCF and the Saskatchewan Métis Society
Introduction and document concerning a conference of Métis people to address deplorable conditions found in most Native communities.
Introduction to Documents: Indian Hunting Rights, Natural Resources Transfer Agreements and Legal Opinions From the Department of Justice
Introduction to Documents One Through Five: Nationalism, the League of Nations and the Six Nations of Grand River
Introduction and five archival documents chronicle Chief Levi General's attempts to have his petition regarding Iroquois nationalism heard at the Assembly of the League of Nations, the predecessor to the United Nations.
Inuit Relocation Policies in Canada and Other Circumpolar Countries, 1925-60: A Report for the Royal Commission on Aboriginal Peoples
Inuit Women Artists: Voices from Cape Dorset
Inupiaq Narratives: Interaction of Demonstratives, Aspect, and Tense
An Investigation of Locus of Control in Dene and Non-Dene Students
Invisible But Not Absent: Aboriginal Women in Sport and Recreation
Ischemic Heart Disease Mortality in American Indians, Hispanics, and Non-Hispanic Whites in New Mexico, 1958–1992
Iskwewak—Kah' Ki Yaw Ni Wahkomakanak: Neither Indian Princesses Nor Easy Squaws
Islands of Truth: Vancouver Island from Captain Cook to the Beginnings of Colonialism
Issue of Self-Determination Avoided: U.N. Working Group on Indigenous Populations
Issues in Cross-Cultural Assessment: American Indian and Alaska Native Students
"It is a Strict Law That Bids Us Dance": Cosmologies, Colonialism, Death, and Ritual Authority in the Kwakwaka'wakw Potlatch, 1849 to 1922
The James Bay and Northern Quebec Agreement: Natural Resources, Public Lands, and the Implementation of a Native Land Claim Settlement
Janet R. Fietz
Jim Groves Interview
Joe Blondeau Interview
Joe McAuley Remembers: "Today Everything Is Different"
Joe Morin: "I Told Myself I Shouldn't Have Come"
Joe Sylvester Interview
Consists of an interview with Joe Sylvester where he gives an account of Indian medicine; legends concerning migration of Algonquin Indians; the role of elders; of the deterioration of reservation conditions following World War II; the religious significance of the number "four"; views on welfare and its role in disrupting traditional Indian values; and a legend about the origin of the drum.
[John Franklin Boyd]
Notes and sketches from a trip taken by John Franklin Boyd in July and August, 1885, from Minnedosa, Manitoba to visit Prince Albert and the places involved in the North-West Rebellion.