Food and Health Perceptions and Practices of Mi'kmaq Children and Youth in Prince Edward Island
Food for Thought: A Postcolonial Study of Food Imagery in Louise Erdrich's Antelope Wife
Footnotes on a Friendship, February 2005
[Four Seasons Speaker's Series: Maria Campbell]
Four Souls
[Frank Weasel Head's Interview on Dance with the Unique History of Blackfoot Dance June 16, 2005]
Frog and Toad Confronted the Alterity of Otherness
Frog Loses Sleep Puzzling Over Parallel Universes
From One Colonization Road to Another? Everyday Memories of the Social and Economic Conditions in Minnewakin, Stone Lake, and Lundar, Manitoba, 1940-1960
from Swift Cinder
From Trickster Poetics to Transgressive Politics: Substantiating Survivance in Tomson Highway's Kiss of the Fur Queen
[The Future of First Nations, Inuit, and Métis Broadcasting: Conversation & Convergence Series: Edmonton Gathering, April 21st, 2017]
[The Future of First Nations, Inuit, and Métis Broadcasting: Conversation & Convergence Series: Winnipeg Gathering, February 17, 2017]
Gathering Knowledge: Indigenous Methodologies of Land/Place-Based Visual Storytelling/Filmmaking and Visual Sovereignty
Gigawaabaa-bye-bye
Goodbye, Columbus: Take Two
Compares the treatment of the "discovery" of North America in two children's books: Encounter by Jane Yolen and A Coyote Columbus Story by Thomas King.
Excerpt from A Broken Flute: The Native Experience in Books for Children edited by Doris Seale and Beverly Slapin.
Grade 5 Social Studies: People and Stories of Canada to 1867: A Foundation for Implementation
Modules: First Peoples, Early European Colonization (1600 to 1763), Fur Trade, and From British Colony to Confederation (1763 to 1867).
Grateful For the Push: A Tribute to Lavonne Ruoff
Guest Editor's Preface : Studies in American Indian Literatures
A Guide For Mobile Mine Workers
Gwayakwaajimowin: Truth Telling: Police Responses to Sexual Violence in Urban Indigenous Communities
[Hank Williams First Nation: Screenplay]
The Hero's Journey in Jame's Welch's Fools Crow and Traditional Pikuni Sacred Geography
Himwic`a: Our Legends: As Told by Our Hupačasath Elders
Retelling of seven traditional stories including: When the Eagle Went to Borrow Eyes from the Snail; The Shadow; Daughter of Sea Cucumber; The Thunderbird Has a Nest on Thunder Mountain; and When the Codfish Was Sad.
Written in English and Hupačasath.
History and Indigeneity in the Works of John Major Richardson
The History of Indigenous HIV: People, Policy and Process
Honoring LaVonne Ruoff
How I Learned to Climb Trees
How Many Legs Does a Bear Have?
How Native American Rappers Communicate and Create a Modern Identity
How Raven Marked the Land When the Earth Was New
"'How Should I Eat These?' With Your Mouth, Asshole": First Nations Women's Literature Responds to Colonial Discourse
Hydrolysis: Coal Mine Mesa, Navajo Nation
"I Became a Woman Through My Words": The Indigenous Feminist Writing of Lee Maracle and Beth Brant
I'm Going Home
"I'm not really healed- I'm just bandaged up": Perceptions of Healing Among Former Students of Indian Residential Schools
I Will Sing (For My People)
Ilagiit and TuqΠuraqtuq Inuit Understandings of Kinship and Social Relatedness
Illusions
Impacts of Place and Social Spaces on Traditional Food Systems in Southwestern Ontario
In Praise of Old Friendships
In the Balance: Indigeneity, Performance, Globalization
Indian Aesthetics: Literature
Indian Residential Schools, Settler Colonialism and Their Narratives in Canadian History
Indians and Immigrants: Survivance Stories of Literacies
Indigenizing the Future: Why We Must Think Spatially in the Twenty-First Century
Looks a the life of Vine Deloria, Jr. and his contributions as an Indigenous thinker and intellectual.
Joint issue with: Indigenous Studies Today Issue 1, Spring 2006.