How Does the Media Portray Drinking Water Security in Indigenous Communities in Canada?: An Analysis of Canadian Newspaper Coverage from 2000-2015
Search performed in Windspeaker, Toronto Star, The Globe and Mail, and National Post yielded 256 relevant results. Analysis of articles found limited coverage focused of government responses rather than preventative measures.
How Grandma Kate Lost Her Cherokee Blood and What This Says about Race, Blood, and Belonging in Indian Country
How "Indians" Think: Colonial Indigenous Intellectuals and the Question of Critical Race Theory
HPV Knowledge and Attitudes among American Indian and Alaska Native Health and STEM Conference Attendees
Huge Earnings for Educated Aboriginals
Examines the income of Saskatchewan Aboriginals; study reveals that Aboriginals have the most to gain from getting an education and that for female Aboriginals the gain is extraordinary.
Entire issue on one pdf. To access article scroll to p.7.
Human Immunodeficiency Virus: Emerging Epidemic in Aboriginal People
The Human Right to Water: A Guide for First Nations Communities and Advocates
"Hunger was never absent": How Residential School Diets Shaped Current Patterns of Diabetes among Indigenous Peoples in Canada
Hustling and Hoaxing: Institutions, Modern Styles, and Yeffe Kimball’s “Native” Art
"I Am Not a Women's Libber Although Sometimes I Sound Like One": Indigenous Feminism and Politicized Motherhood
"I Became a Woman Through My Words": The Indigenous Feminist Writing of Lee Maracle and Beth Brant
"I Belong in This World": Native Americanisms and the Western Industrial Workers of the World, 1905-1917
I Dream of Yesterday and Tomorrow: A Celebration of the James Bay Cree
“I feel safe just coming here because there are other Native brothers and sisters”: Findings from a Community-based Evaluation of the Niiwin Wendaanimak Four Winds Wellness Program
Study evaluates community services available to homeless and at risk Indigenous people in Toronto. Found that the collaborative services model currently in place used inclusive and harm reduction models to create a non-judgmental space; identified program strengths, challenges, and gaps and makes policy recommendations.
['I Honoured Him Until the End': Storytelling of Indigenous Female Caregivers and Care Providers Focused on Alzheimer's Disease and Other Dementias (ADOD)]
"I'm not really healed- I'm just bandaged up": Perceptions of Healing Among Former Students of Indian Residential Schools
I’taamohkanoohsin (everyone comes together): (Re)connecting Indigenous people experiencing homelessness and substance misuse to Blackfoot ways of knowing
“I Thought You'd Call Her White Feather”: Native Women and Racial Microaggressions in Doctoral Education
Looks at the cross-cultural experiences of female Indigenous doctoral students in the United States.