Busy Schedules Deny Kids Effective Parenting
But the Shadow of Her Story: Narrative Unsettlement, Self-Inscription, and Translation in Pauline Johnson’s Legends of Vancouver
By Any Means Necessary? Tourism, Economics, and the Preservation of Language
By Any Other Name: Rhetorical Colonialism in North America
By One Attached To-- But Not Of: Historical Photography of the Eastern Arctic by Luta Munday and Geraldine Moodie
Cabinet Tells Gray to Settle
Calgary Aboriginal Services Guide: 2011 – 2012
California American Indian / Alaska Native Maternal and Infant Health Status Report
Calling A Spade A Shovel: Tribal/Ethnic Studies vs. University Policy
Camping at the Caribou Crossing: Relating Palaeo-Eskimo Lithic Technological Change and Human Mobility Patterns in Southeastern Victoria Island, Nunavut
Camping with the Sioux: Fieldwork Diary of Alice Cunningham Fletcher
Can Aboriginal Land Use and Occupancy Studies Be Applied Effectively in Forest Management: A State of Knowledge Report
Can the Assembly of First Nations Education Action Plan Succeed? Colonialism's Effect on Traditional Knowledge in Two Communities
Can the Sled Dog Sleep? Postcolonialism, Cultural Transformation and the Consumption of Inuit Culture
Can This Language Be Saved?
Canada and the History Without a People: Identity, Tradition and Struggle in a Non-status Aboriginal Community
Canada, Churches Appeal Residential School Decisions
Examines the vicarious liability claims of churches and the federal government for the actions of school employees.
Entire issue on one pdf. To access article scroll to p.9.
Canada Customs, Each-you-eyh-ul Siem (?) Sights/Sites of Meaning in Musquem Weaving
Canada in the Making: Aboriginals: Treaties & Relations
Canada, Inc.
The Relevance of Ideology to the Emergence of a Capitalist Social Formation in Rupert's Land and the "Indian Territories" of British North American, 1852 to 1885
Canada's Aboriginal Education Crisis
Looks at the need for quality education for First Nations children equitable to that of all other Canadian children.
Entire issue on one pdf. To access article scroll to p.18.
Canada's Aboriginal Languages
Canada's Actions Speaks Louder than Words
Reports on compensation legislation for child abuse cases and how inequitable settlements have been inadequate.
Entire issue on one pdf. To access article scroll to p.5.
[Canada's Apartheid: A John Stackhouse Series]
Canada's Day of Atonement: The Contemporary Native Literary Renaissance, the Native Cultural Renaissance and Post-Centenary Canadian Mythology
Canada's Emerging Aboriginal Millennials: A National Survey Reading of Aboriginal Teens & Other Teens
Canada's First Nations
Canada's Missing and Murdered Indigenous People and the Imperative for a More Inclusive Perspective
Canada's Sovereignty in the Arctic: An Inuit Perspective
Canada - The Nisga'a Final Agreement in Brief
Canadian Aboriginal Books for Schools: Selected & Evaluated by Teacher-Librarians: 2009-2010 Catalogue
Canadian Aboriginal Concerns With Oil Sands: A Compilation of Key Issues, Resolutions and Legal Activities
Canadian Aboriginal Fertility
Canadian Aboriginal Law in 2018: Essays & Case Summaries
Canadian Identity and Canada's Indian Residential School Apology
Canadian Illustrated News: Images in the News: 1869-1883
Canadian Indigenous Audiovisual Production Report 2010-11 to 2016-17
Canadian Indigenous Books for Schools: Selected and Evaluated by Teacher-Librarians and Educators: 2019/20
Canadian Indigenous Books for Schools: Selected & Evaluated by Teacher-Librarians and Educators, 2018/19
Canadian Indigenous Children's Books through the Lense of Truth and Reconciliation
Primary source for titles was Amazon Best Sellers in Children’s Native Canadian Story Books, as well as publishers' web pages, and library and authors' lists. Objective was to identify fiction books for ages 0-18 written by Indigenous authors that contained reconciliation-related themes. More than 150 books met the inclusion criteria.
Canadian Inuit History: A Thousand-year Odyssey
Chronicles the history of the Inuit people from their origins, in the prehistoric period, through to European contact and the formation of Nunavut. The article also discusses Inuit possibilities for the future.