Baker Lake Renaissance
The Balance Destroyed: The Consequences for Māori Women of the Colonisation of Tikanga Māori
Balancing History
Created to be used with the article Warp, Weft, Weave: Joining Generations published in vol. 53, Issue, 3, 2020 of British Columbia History magazine. Designed for students in Grades 8 to 12.
Band Operated Funding Formula: Summary of Cost Factors
Barriers to Youth Employment in Nunavut: A Research Report and Action Plan
Bart Hanna: Heart of a Wanderer
Bartleman's Efforts Continue to Benefit Youth
Relates James Bartleman’s initiatives to institute educational programs that provide more learning opportunities, suicide counseling, and promote literacy and education to the youth.
Entire issue on one pdf. To access article scroll to p.26.
Baseline Data Capture: Cultural Safety, Partnership and Health Equity Initiatives: Final Report
Basketmaking Guides and the Appropriation of Indigenous Basketry
Batoche ... One More Time
Battered But Not Broken: Exploring Aboriginal Women & Intimate Partner Abuse
BC First Nations Fisheries Action Plan: Preparing for Transformative Change in the BC Fisheries
BC First Nations Head Start: On-reserve Program
Beach-Dune Morphodynamics and Climatic Variability in Gwaii Haanas National Park and Haida Heritage Site, British Columbia, Canada
The Bear-Walker & Other Stories
Beatrice Medicine, Ph.D (1923-2005)
The Beaver in Art
Because My Father Always Said He Was the Only Indian Who Saw Jimmy Hendrix Play the 'Star Spangled Banner' at Woodstock
Becoming a Role Model: Experiences of Native Student Teachers
Becoming Self-in-Relation: Coming of Age as a Pathway towards Wellness for Urban Indigenous Youth in Care
Discusses the importance of a culturally relevant framework during the coming of age period for Indigenous youth.
Before the Country: Native Renaissance, Canadian Mythology
Behind the Exhibit: Exploring the Processes of Indigenous Rights
Representation at the Canadian Museum for Human Rights
Being a Grandmother in the Tewa World
"Being a Half-Breed": Discourses of Race and Cultural
Syncreticity in the Works of Three Metis Women Writers
Being Alive Well: Aboriginal Youth and Evidence-Based Approaches to Promoting Mental Well-Being
Being American: Traditional, Bicultural, and Assimilated: The American Indian Dilemma
Being and Belonging: The State of the Field
Being Indian in White Country
Being Indigenous in an Unlikely Place: Self-Determination in the Yakut Autonomous Soviet Socialist Republic (1920-1991)
Examines and compares the ways Indigenous groups from different places organize and mobilized in different ways.
Being Lakota: Identity and Tradition on Pine Ridge Reservation
Being There: Stage Presence and The Unnatural and Accidental Women
"The Belly of This Story": Storytelling and Symbolic Birth
in Native American Fiction
Belonging and Homelessness in 'Post-Modern' Alberta Literature: Community at the Limits of Discourse
Beloved Uncle Was Not Just Another 'Homeless Bum'
Beluga Co-Management: Perspectives From Kuujjuarapik and Umiujaq, Nunavik
The "Bended Elbow" News, Kenora 1974: How a Small-Town Newspaper Promoted Colonization
Bending the Rules: The Montreal Branch of the Woman's Art Association of Canada, 1894-1900
Benefits and Risks of Traditional Food for Indigenous Peoples: Focus on Dietary Intakes of Arctic Men
Benefits of Aboriginal Land Use Studies
Benefits, Services, and Resources for Aboriginal Peoples
Benelong's Haven: Recovery from Alcohol and Drug Use within an Aboriginal Australian Residential Treatment Centre
[Bennie Klain]
Bernice Sayese
Chronicles the life and works of the first Aboriginal woman to receive the Prince Albert Citizen of the Year Award.
Entire issue on one pdf. To access article scroll to p.26.