“What’s on the earth is in the stars; and what’s in the stars is on the earth”: Lakota Relationships with the Stars and American Relationships with the Apocalypse
What the People Said: Findings From the Regional Roundtables of the Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Suicide Prevention Evaluation Project
What We Heard: Indigenous Peoples and COVID-19
'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
"When Willow Roots Start to Thaw, People Come Back to Life...": Relations of Chukchi Reindeer Herders to Plants
Examines the relationship between reindeer herders and ethnobotany.
Where Are the Children Buried?
General overview of historical context along with examples of specific schools for illustrative purposes and 'gap analysis' to recommend areas where further research is required. Second part of report is a more detailed summary of information on each school’s location and construction sequence, duration of operation, and reported cemeteries.
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
The White Earth Digital Tribal Museum: Creation of an Open-Access Online Museum Using 3D Images of Cultural Heritage Objects
White Eyes, Red Heart: Mixed-Blood Indians in American History
The White Man’s Camera: The National Film Board of Canada and Representations of Indigenous Peoples in Post-War Canada
History Thesis (PhD) -- University of Manitoba, 2021.
Whitehorse Point in Time Count 2021: Community Report
Who are the "Aboriginal Peoples of Canada"? Case Comment on R. v. Desautel, 2021 SCC 17
Who Holds the Frame?: Language as Representation in the Art of Emmi Whitehorse and Maria Hupfield
Who was the “Fine Young Man”?: The Frog Lake “Massacre” Revisited
Whose Land is It Anyway? A Manual for Decolonization
Why a Living Wage Matters in the North
"Why Do You Want to Help Me? I've Never Even Been to Your Home ...": A Journey in Cross-Cultural Social Work with Aboriginal People
Why I Don't Like Museums: a Reply to the Commentary "Personal, Academic and Institutional Perspectives on Museums and First Nations" by Robert R. Janes
Why Run? Utah Candidate Cites Standing Rock as 'Awakening' #Nativevote18
"Why Shouldn't We Live in Technicolor Like Everybody Else..." Evolving Traditions: Professional Northwest Coast First Nations Women Artists
Why Treaties Matter: Self-Government in the Dakota and Ojibwe Nations: Educator Guide for Grades 6-12
For use with the virtual exhibition Why Treaties Matter.
Wicubami: Honoring Alexis Nakota Sioux Ish?awimin through Kinship, Language, Spirit, and Research
Windspeaker Special Section: Education
Discusses aspects of education and learning in different disciplines, programs and locations in Canada and Greenland, with an emphasis on cultural content.
Entire issue on one pdf. To access article scroll to p.13.
The Wisdom of Thunder: Indigenous Knowledge Translation of Experiences and Responses to Depression Among Indigenous Peoples Living with HIV
Social Work Thesis (PhD) -- McMaster University, 2017.
Wise Practices in Crime Prevention Programs: Implemented for and by Aboriginal Communities in BC
"The Wish to Become a Red Indian": Indianthusiasm and Racil Ideologies in German
"Without Destroying Ourselves": American Indian Intellectual Activism for Higher Education, 1915-1978
Wolf Lake: The Importance of Métis Connection to Land and Place
Native Studies Thesis (M.A.)--University of Alberta, 2017.
Women and the Criminal Justice System
Women, Colonization and Resistance: Elements of an Amerindian Autohistorical Approach to the Study of Law and Colonialism
Women's Right to Food in the City: Indigenous Single Mothers Confronting Unjust Foodscapes, Poverty, and Racism in Winnipeg
A Woodland Creation Story: A Concise Version
Based on the Iroquois story as told by John A. Gibson in the 1890s. Done in a glossary format.