Indigenous New Media Arts: Narrative Threads and Future Imaginaries
Indigenous Peoples Atlas of Canada: Teacher's Kit for Giant Floor Map
Topics include climate change, demographics, Indigenous governance, housing, human rights, Indigenous languages, migration, famous people, original place names, residential schools, seasonal cycles, symbols, timeline, trade routes, and treaties, land disputes, agreements and rights.
Although activities were created for the giant floor map, they can be adapted to the printable tile version.
Indigenous Trauma Is Not a Frontier: Breaking Free from Colonial Economies of Trauma and Responding to Trafficking, Disappearances, and Deaths of Indigenous Women and Girls
International Disaster Risk Reduction Strategies and Indigenous Peoples
Introduction: Fraud in Native American Communities: Essays in Honor of Suzan Shown Harjo
Introduction: Rethinking Blackness and Indigeneity in the Light of Settler Colonial Theory
Keeoukaywin: The Visiting Way—Fostering an Indigenous Research Methodology
Keepers of the Earth
Land Claims [Part One]
Land Claims [Part Two]
Land Spirit Power: First Nations cultural Production and Canadian Nationhood
Language and Identity: Ethnolinguistic Vitality of Aboriginal Peoples in Canada
Language, Culture and Identity: Some Inuit Examples
Living in a (Schrödinger’s) Box: Jimmie Durham’s Strategic Use of Ambiguity
Local Values in Governance: Legacy of Choho in Forest and School Management in a Tamang Community in Nepal
Lubicon Lake Nation: Spirit of Resistance
"Métis, c'est ma nation. 'Your own people,' comme on dit": Life Histories from Eva, Evelyn, Priscilla and Jennifer Richard
Moving Towards an Indigenous Research Process: A Reflexive Approach to Empirical Work with First Nations Communities in Canada
My Reflection of that Time
Narratives of Hope: Enacting Indigenous Language and Cultural Reclamation across Geographies and Positionalities
Native Narratives: The Representation of Native Americans in Public Broadcasting
Looks at radio and television coverage of key events or issues in both non-Native American-produced and Native American-created programs found in the American Archive of Public Broadcasting collection. Divided into five sections: (Mis)Representations of Native Americans; Termination, Relocation, and Restoration; The American Indian Movement; Native Americans in Contemporary News Media; and Visual Sovereignty: Native-Created Public Media.
Natives and Reserve Establishment in Nineteenth Century British Columbia
Not a One-Size-Fits-All Approach: Building Tribal Infrastructure for Research through CRCAIH
Not Jimmie Durham's Cherokee
Notes on Becoming a Comrade: Indigenous Women, Leadership, and Movement(s) for Decolonization
Author uses her own experiences as non-Indigenous woman of color to explore the challenges in becoming an ally with Indigenous communities fight in their fight for decolonization.
Object (To) Sanctity: The Politics of the Object
On the Importance of Language: Reclaiming Indigenous Place Names at Wasagamack ᐘᕊᑲᒪᕁ First Nation, Manitoba, Canada
Our Stories: First Peoples in Canada
Our Stories: First Peoples in Canada
Paul Boyer on the New Information Age
Planning for the Next Generation: Capital Infrastructure at Colleges and Universities
Playing Indian, between Idealization and Vilification: Seems You Have to Play Indian to be Indian
"Please Eunice, Don't Be Ignorant": The White Reader as Trickster in Lee Maracle's Fiction
Discusses how Lee Maracle leads her readers to see the realities of a world that is rigid and unequally divided by using "we", "I" and "you" to flip the idea of "others".