Culture at the Centre of Community Based Aged Care in a Remote Australian Indigenous Setting: A Case Study of the Development of Yuendumu Old People's Programme
Culture-Based School Mathematics for Reconciliation and Professional Development
Related material: Interview with teacher participant.
Culture Brings Meaning to Adult Learning: A Medicine Wheel Approach to Program Planning
The Culture is Prevention Project: Adapting the Cultural Connectedness Scale for Multi-Tribal Communities
Culture of Sharing: North Slope Leaders Forge Trail into Future
The Culture of Strengths Makes Them Feel Valued and Competent: Aboriginal Children, Child Welfare, and a School Strengths Intervention
Culture Warriors: Education and Awareness at the Inaugural National Indigenous Art Triennial, organized by National Gallery of Australia, 2007-2009.
Curatorial Practice in Anthropology: Organized Space and Knowledge Production
Curbing Cultural Appropriation in the Fashion Industry
Current Evidence on Factors That Impact Aboriginal Peoples' Resiliency and Vulnerability to HIV/AIDS
Current Health Services, Chapter 3
Customary Law and Conflict Resolution Among Kenya's Pastoralist Communities
CyberCircles: InternetWorking For Aboriginal Community Research
Cybersafety for an Indigenous Youth Population
Cyrus Dallin's The Scout: Civic Identity Cast through a Native
Equestrian Monument
Daily Life of the Inuit
Daisy Bates, Grand Dame of the Desert
Dakota Dunes Community Development Corporation Shares Gaming Profits
Dakota & Lakota Traditional Games Resource
Dakota games included: Kaƞsu kutepi (They shoot the plum seed); Tasiha uƞpi (Foot bone game); Hokṡina itazipe 9Young boy’s archery); Tahuka caƞhdeṡka (Hoop and arrow); Caƞkawacipina (Spinning tops and whip); and Takapsicapi (Lacrosse).
Lakota games included: Icaslohe econpi (Game of bowls); Inyan onyeyapi (A rock sling); Ipahotonpi (Popgun; Napsiyohli (Small Finger Ring); Tateka yumunpi (Wind Buzzer); and Tate kahwogyapi (Wind Chaser – They are chasing the wind).
Dakota Philospher: Charles Eastman and American Indian Thought
Dana Claxton, The Mustang Suite and Hybrid Humour
The Dance of Person & Place: One Interpretation of American Indian Philosophy
Dances with Dependency: Out of Poverty through Self-Reliance
Dancing Power: Examining Identity Through Native American Powwow
Dancing That Way, Things Began to Change: The Ghost Dance as Pantribal Metaphor in Sherman Alexie's Writing
Dart and Arrow Points on the Columbia Plateau of Western North America
Data Brief From the Circumpolar Health Observatory: Introduction and Population [2010-1]
"Dave, Come on": Indigenous Identities and Language Play in Yves Sioui Durand's Hamlet-le-Malécite
The Dawn of Translation
(De)Constructing The “Lazy Indian”: An Historical Analysis of Welfare Reform in Canada
Dę'ni:s nisa'sgao'dę?: Haudenosaunee Clans and the Reconstruction of Traditional Haudenosaunee Identity, Citizenship, and Nationhood
Dead Dogs and Living History
Dead Men Do Tell Tales: The Existential Significance of the Dead in Four Sheets to the Wind
Deadliest Enemies: Law and Race Relations On and Off Rosebud Reservation
Deadly Detectives: How Aboriginal Australian Writers are Re-creating Crime Fiction
Dear Shorty
The Decade of Education for Sustainable Development (DESD) and Sustainability Education in First Nations Schools in Manitoba
Decades of Doing: Indigenous Women Academics Reflect on the Practices of Community-Based Health Research
Decentering Durham
A Declaration of Indian Rights: The BC Indian Position Paper (excerpt)
Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples
The Decline of Kayaking Traditions in Arctic Canada
Decoda Literacy Solutions: Aboriginal Literacy Materials
Decolonisation as a Social Change Framework and its Impact on the Development of Indigenous-based Curricula for Helping Professionals in Mainstream Tertiary Education Organisations
Decolonization in Unexpected Places: Native Evangelicalism and the Rearticulation of Mission
A Decolonizing Approach to Health Promotion in Canada: The Case of the Urban Aboriginal Community Kitchen Garden Project
Decolonizing Attribution: Traditions of Exclusion
Decolonizing Diabetes
Researchers use a decolonizing approach in this study; interviewed 22 people from a First Nations community in Northern Ontario to explore the lived experience and perceptions about developing the disease. Findings indicate a need for culturally appropriate care.