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The Iliviaq Returns to Gjoa Haven: Interrogating Objects from Roald Amundsen’s Collection in the Nattilik Heritage Centre
Imaginary Passports or the Wealth of Obligations: Seeking the Limits of Adoption into Indigenous Societies
Impacts of the 2018 Newfoundland and Labrador Winter Games on Youth Who Participated in the Sport of Olympic Wrestling with Team Indigenous
In Search of Wakȟáŋ
Incorporating Culture: How Indigenous People Are Reshaping the Northwest Coast Art Industry
Indian Boarding Schools, Before and After: A Personal Introduction
The author reflects his father's experience in the American boarding school system.
Indigenization as Inclusion, Reconciliation, and Decolonization: Navigating the Different Visions for Indigenizing the Canadian Academy
Indigenous Education: Using the Science of Storywork to Teach With and Within Instead of About Indigenous Peoples
Discusses the revision of the British Columbia curriculum to incorporate the First Peoples Principles of Learning (FBBL) towards the goal of reconciliation.
Indigenous Justice: New Tools, Approaches, and Spaces
Indigenous People and Information and Communication Technologies: The Strengths and Weaknesses of Official Data in Argentina
Indigenous Planning and Municipal Governance: Lessons from the Transformative Frontier
Indigenous Rememberings and Forgettings: Sixteenth-Century Nahua Letters and Petitions to the Spanish Crown
Indigenous Womanhood, Precarity and the Nation State: An Arts-based Performance that offers a New Pathway to Reconciliation
Inspiration from Museum Collections: An Exhibit as a Case Study in Building Relationships between Museums and Indigenous Artists
Intersecting the Cultural Landscapes of Uummannaq Island, SW Greenland, through Epistemologies of Geology and Environmental Anthropology
Intervening in the Archive: Women-Water Alliances, Narrative Agency, and Reconstructing Indigenous Space in Deborah Miranda’s Bad Indians: A Tribal Memoir
Introduction aux collections arctiques et à la muséologie : Présentations, diffusions et interprétations / Introduction to Arctic Collections and Museology: Presentations, Disseminations, and Interpretations
“It’s a Social Thing”: Sociocultural Experiences with Nutrition and Exercise in Anchorage, Alaska
It’s all about Whanaungatanga: Alcohol Use and Older Māori in Aotearoa
Ka Nikanitet: pour une pratique culturellement sécuritaire de la protection de la jeunesse en contextes autochtones
Ka Oopikihtamashook’: Becoming Family
Kaupapa Kōrero: A Māori Cultural Approach to Narrative Inquiry
Kinshipwrecking: John Smith’s Adoption and the Pocahontas Myth in Settler Ontologies
The Kootenai War of '74
A "Labyrinth of Uncertainties": Penobscot River Islands, Land Assignments, and Indigenous Women Proprietors in Nineteenth-Century Maine
The Lakota Language Project at Red Cloud Indian School: Turning the Tide of Native Language Loss
Discusses a Lakota language program and the effects it had on the students and their community.
"Land Was One of the Greatest Gifts": Women's Landownership in Dakota Indian, Immigrant Scandinavian, and African American Communities
Learning to be Part of the Land: Experiences of a Canadian Indigenous Researcher Doing Research in a Yucatec Maya Community
Lessons Learned From a Food Environment Intervention Study: Recruitment and Retention of Participants in Disadvantaged Urban Inner-City Neighborhoods
Lifta, the Nakba, and the Museumification of Palestine's History
Looking to the Land: Local Responses to Food Insecurity in Two Rural and Remote First Nations
Louise Erdrich’s The Round House, the Wiindigoo, and Star Trek: The Next Generation
Making the Buffalo Commons New Again: Rangeland Restoration and Bison Reintroduction in the Montana Highline
The Many Lives of Justiniano Roxas: The Centenarian Fantasy in American History and Memory
Māori Women Leading Local Sustainable Food Systems
Maria Tallchief, (Native) America's Prima Ballerina: Autobiographies of a Postindian Princess
The Mentoring of Miss Deloria: Poetics, Politics, and the Test of Tradition
Article examines Ella Cara Deloria’s life and career as an anthropologist in the context of her relationship with her mentors, relationship with the discipline of anthropology, and personal and community life.
Metis Pioneers: Marie Rose Delorme Smith and Isabella Clark Hardisty Lougheed
Métis Rising: Living Our Present Through the Power of Our Past
The Midnight Rider: The EPA and Tribal Self-Determination.
Using a rider added by Senator James Inhof to a transportation bill as a case study, the author analyzes the Environmental Protection Agency’s (EPA) relationship with Indigenous people in the United States, and offers criticism on the EPA’s failure to respect tribal self-determination.