Whānau Hauā: Reframing Disability from an Indigenous Perspective
What about the Men?: Northern Men's Research Project: Final Report
Research conducted to document men's feelings about learning, work and well-being. Methods used were interviews (33 participants), closed questionnaires (166), workshop with the community-based researchers and Indigenous male role models (11).
Related Material: Summary and Recommendations.
What Can We Talk about, in Which Language, in What Way and with Whom? Sami Patients' Experiences of Language Choice and Cultural Norms in Mental Health Treatment
What Crisis? Global Lessons From Norway for Managing Energy-Based Economies
What Do Indigenous Knowledges Do for Indigenous Peoples?
What do the Recent Site C Decisions Mean for Major Projects in British Columbia?
What Do We Do about the Legacy of Indian Residential Schools?
What Douglas Students Know About Indigenous Realities in Canada
Survey of 479 first-term students conducted in the fall 2018 consisted of both multiple-choice and open-ended questions concerning current events, history, culture, geography and governance.
What Happens After the Traditional Knowledge Study? Some Issues to Consider About Ownership and Confidentiality
What Is Dementia?: Indigenous Perspectives and Cultural Understandings
What Is Wrong With This Picture?: Indigenous Artists Contest The "Place" Of Indigenous People In Canada
What It Takes to Support a Loved One with FASD: A Photovoice Project for the CanFASD Research Network Family Advisory Committee
What Queen's Students Know about Indigenous Realities in Canada
Survey of 844 exiting-year students from across 5 faculties and 20 disciplines was conducted from December 2017 to April 2018 consisted of both multiple-choice and open-ended questions.
What's a National Inquiry? How Do Inquiries Work?
What's Happening in Saskatchewan? We're Learning to Infuse Indigenous Perspectives into Our Science Courses
What's in those Sacred Bundles?
What's Killing Our Children? Child and Infant Mortality Among American Indians and Alaska Natives
What's Next? Three Ways to Add Money to Indian Health and Bigger Fights Ahead
What's the Scoop: Carey Newman and the Witness Blanket
Talk by the creator of large-scale art installation comprised of objects gathered from the sites of residential schools across Canada. Duration: 1:24:11.
What Shall We Do with the Bodies? Reconsidering the Archive in the Aftermath of Fraud
What Strikes a Chord?: The Construction of Resonance in Collective Action Frames on Missing and Murdered Indigenous Women and Girls in Canada
What the People Said: Findings From the Regional Roundtables of the Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Suicide Prevention Evaluation Project
What We Have Learned: Principles of Truth and Reconciliation
'What We Heard': Report to Employment and Social Development Canada on the Feedback Received Regarding the
What We Know and Don't Know about Risk Assessment with Offenders of Indigenous Heritage
What We Learned: Two Generations Reflect on Tsimshian Education and the Day Schools
What Works in Effective Indigenous Community-Managed Programs and Organisations
When Consumerism and Art Collide: A Question of Identity
When Disinformation Turns Deadly: The Case of Missing and Murdered Indigenous Women and Girls in Canadian Media
When Do Ideas of an Arctic Treaty Become Prominent in Arctic Governance Debates?
When Research is Relational: Supporting the Research Practices of Indigenous Studies Scholars
When the Children Left
Short documentary about a woman's sister who died while completing her high school away from home.
'When You Admit You're a Thief, Then You Can Be Honourable': Native/Non-Native Collaboration in the Book of Jessica
Where Are Our American Indian/Alaska Native Boys and Young Men?: Understanding Postsecondary Education Trends
Where Did That Come From? Indigenous Activists Discuss the Creation of Canada's National Missing and Murdered Indigenous Women Inquiry
Where Is the Indigenous Law in State Sponsored Transitional Justice Processes? Witnessing and Truth-Telling in the Truth and Reconciliation Commission of Canada
Political Science Thesis (M.A.)--University of British Columbia, 2017.
Where They Meet: Indigenous Activism and City Planning in Winnipeg, Manitoba
Where Truth Telling and White Public Pedagogy Collide: Educative Barriers to Restorative Justice in Dakota Homeland
Where Waters Meet: Merging the Strengths of Aboriginal and Mainstream Educational Practices to Improve Students' Experiences at School
Whirlwind School: A Case Study of Church-State Relationships in Native American Education
An overview of the history of the Whirlwind School, located on Cheyenne-Arapaho land in Oklahoma, and what lead to its closure.