“I Had to Grow Up Pretty Quickly”: Social, Cultural, and Gender Contexts of Aboriginal Girls’ Smoking
"I'm Indian in My Bones": Debunking Stereotypes and Subverting Dominant Culture in the Works of Sherman Alexie
"I Only Smoke When I Have Nothing To Do": A Qualitative Study on How Smoking is Part of Everyday Life in a Greenlandic Village
I’taamohkanoohsin (everyone comes together): (Re)connecting Indigenous people experiencing homelessness and substance misuse to Blackfoot ways of knowing
“I would prefer to have my healthcare provided over a cup of tea any day”: Recommendations by Urban Métis Women to Improve Access to Health and Social Services in Toronto for the Métis Community
Identifying Barriers to Healthcare Delivery and Access in the Circumpolar North: Important Insights for Health Professionals
Identity and Cultural Difference in Contemporary Aboriginal Autobiographical Narratives in Canada and Australia
Identity-Based Appeals: Explaining Changing Strategies of the Indigenous Movement in Bolivia
Identity in Cultural Appropriation: Native American Representations in Euro-American Art
Idle No More a Unique, Unprecedented Moment in History
Comments on an informative meeting that looked at Aboriginal resistance over the past 150 years and a short history of the Indian Act.
Entire issue on one pdf. To access article scroll to p.16.
Idle No More: Protest to Change?: A Grassroots Movement
"If This Great Nation May Be Saved?" The Discourse of Civilization in Cherokee Indian Removal
“If You Fall Down, You Get Back Up”: Creating a Space for Testimony and Witnessing by Urban Indigenous Women and Girls
Imagery, Technology, and Remote Adult Aboriginal Teacher Candidates: A Brock University Pilot Project
The Impact of Australian Policy Regimes on Indigenous Population Movement: Evidence from the 2001 Census
Provides statistics on population distribution, propensity to move by age, sex, and remoteness of community, and migration to more accessible regions.
Chapter fifteen from Moving Forward, Making a Difference, vol. 1, which is also vol. 3 in the Aboriginal Policy Research series.
Originally presented at the second annual Aboriginal Policy Research Conference, 2006.
Impact of Euro-Canadian Agrarian Practices: In Search of Sustainable Import-Substitution Strategies to Enhance Food Security in Subarctic Ontario, Canada
Implementation Evaluation of the Nutrition North Canada Program: Final Report
Improving the Accessibility of Health Services in Urban and Regional Settings for Indigenous People
Improving the Early Life Outcomes of Indigenous Children: Implementing Early Childhood Development at the Local Level
Improving the State of Health Hardware in Australian Indigenous Housing: Building More Houses is Not the Only Answer
In Alliance as Native Youth Leaders, as Family
In-Between Worlds: Native Americans and Utopias of Belonging on Screen
In Conversation with Centering Anishinaabeg Studies: A Review
In From the Margins, Part II: Reducing Barriers to Social Inclusion and Social Cohesion
In Honor of Nastáo: Kasaan Haida Elders Look to the Future
In the Footprints of Our Ancestors: Exploring the Reconnection to my Cree Ancestors (âniskôtapânak) and Ancestral Land in the Lesser Slave Lake Area
In Their Own Words: First Nations Girls' Resilience as Reflected Through Their Understandings of Health
[Income Earnings Tables by Nunavut, Region and Community, 2011 NHS (4 tables)]
The Indian Removal Debate and Rise of Partisan Identity in the Age of Jackson
Indians Weaving in Cyberspace: Indigenous Urban Youth Cultures, Identities and Politics of Languages
Indicators of Food and Water Security in an Arctic Health Context: Results From an International Workshop Discussion
Indigenizing Education with the Game When Rivers Were Trails
Indigenizing the Academy: Confronting "Contentious Ground"
Indigenous and Non-Indigenous Marriage Partnerships
Indigenous Broadband Policy Advocacy in Canada's Far North
Discusses the history of Indigenous engagement with media and telecommunication policy and looks at how a consortium composed of academic researchers and First Nations technology organizations used hearings held by the Canadian Radio-television and Telecommunications Commission (CRTC) to bring three issues to the forefront: open access to transport networks; subsidy support for First Nations community networks; and the need for consultation with Indigenous communities about infrastructure development and service upgrades taking place in their territories.
Indigenous Early Learning and Care in the City of Edmonton: Articulating the Experiences, Perspectives and Needs of Indigenous Parents and Caregivers
Recommendations developed as a result of feedback gathered in six Talking Circles composed of both Indigenous and non-Indigenous participants.