The Three Sisters: Renewing the World
Discusses the long history of Indigenous agriculture, how plants from the New World spread to the Old. and the need to return to traditional practices and regain food sovereignty. Educators share their experiences and lesson plans which use the story of the Three Sisters to teach a variety of subjects. Created to accompany the video.
Ti wa7 szwatenem. What We Know: Indigenous Knowledge and Learning
Tourists, Tour Guides and True Stories: Aboriginal Cultural Tourism in the Top End
Towards an Indigenous-Informed Relational Approach to Free, Prior, and Informed Consent (FPIC)
Towards Indigenous Marine Management: A Case Study of Yelloweye Rockfish on the Central Coast of British Columbia
Traditional Approach Solves New Problems
Discussion with Margaret Wapass, who intends to utilize traditional holistic counseling in order to address residential school syndrome, intergenerational impacts, crime prevention, corrections services and addictions.
Entire issue on one pdf. To access article scroll to p.22.
Traditional Knowledge Focus of Camp
Traditional Knowledge in the Time of Neo-Liberalism: Access and Benefit-Sharing Regimes in Indian and Bhutan
Transformations and Remembrances in the Digital Game We Sing for Healing
Transformative Learning, Tribal Membership and Cultural Restoration: A Case Study of an Embedded Native American Service-learning at a Research University
Tribal Data Governance and Informational Privacy: Constructing "Indigenous Data Sovereignty"
True Tracks: Indigenous Cultural and Intellectual Property Principles for Putting Self-Determination into Practice
Two-spirits: Conceptualization in a L’nuwey Worldview
Unsettling Methodologies/Decolonizing Movements
The Use of Traditional Knowledge in Cree Hunting Strategies
Vulnerability of Subsistence Systems Due to Social and Environmental Change: A Case Study in the Yukon-Kuskokwim Delta, Alaska
Vuntut Gwitchin Traditional Knowledge and Sustainable Use Practices Associated with Their Subsistence Harvest of the Porcupine Caribou Herd
The Water We Call Home: Five Generations of Indigenous Women's Resistance along the Salish Sea
Ways of Knowing: Experience, Knowledge, and Power Among the Dene Tha
What Happens After the Traditional Knowledge Study? Some Issues to Consider About Ownership and Confidentiality
Who Knows What about Gorillas? Indigenous Knowledge, Global Justice, and Human-Gorilla Relations.
Words Are Not Enough: Stories of Indigenous Learning
Workmanship and Relationships: Indigenous Food Trading and Sharing Practices on Vancouver Island
The WoW Gathering: A Land-Based Positive Action Initiative to Support Indigenous People Living with HIV
Discusses the Weaving our Wisdom (WoW) program's use of land as a healing tool to improve the health of Indigenous people living with HIV and AIDS. The land-based WoW gathering took place at the Wanuskewin Heritage Site.
Wrestling with Fire: Indigenous Women’s Resistance and Resurgence
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