"Inspector Dickens Journal" Fort Pitt, 1885.
Historical note:
Institutionalizing Inherent Aboriginal Rights: A First Nations Province
Instructional Preferences of Cree, Inuit, and Mohawk Teachers
L' Insurrection du Nord-Ouest, 1885
Interior of Fort Pitt, Just [Before] the Rebellion of 1885
Intertribal Integration: The Ethnological Argument in Duro v. Reina
Intriguing Archaeological Find Made At Wanuskewin
Introduction [Studies in American Indian Literatures, Series 2, vol.3 no.2]
Introduction to Document One
Introduction and letter from Indian Agent dated June 4th, 1895 to his superior regarding abuse taking place at the school. Recommends that a teacher should be brought before the Magistrate, fined, and dismissed.
Introduction to Documents Two and Three
Introduction and two archival items discuss the employment of Aboriginals in the agricultural sector. The first deals with the Dept. of Indian Affairs efforts to recruit them as migrant farm workers. The second discusses the exclusion of farm workers from protection under labour laws. Taken from the 1966 National Agricultural Manpower Committee Meeting.
Introduction: ``To Get There it Had to Walk Through Hell``
Introduction to the Special Issue
The Inuit Community Workers' Experience of Youth Protection
Inuit Crafts in Broughton Island, Northwest Territories: Producer and Consumer Influences
Inuit Exposure to Organochlorines Through The Aquatic Food Chain in Arctic Québec
Inuit Literature in English: A Chronological Survey
Inuit Redistribution and Development: Processes of Change in the Eastern Canadian Arctic, 1922-1968
Inuit Statistics: An Analysis of the Categories Used in Government Data Collections
Investigations into the Present and Future State of Aboriginal Mental Health
An Iron Hand Upon the People: The Law Against the Potlatch on the Northwest Coast
Irony and Indians: A Collection of Original Fiction
The Iroquois and the Native of American Government
Is That All There Is? Tribal Literature
Discussion on stories that make up tribal literature and the fact that all words have three levels of meaning: the surface, the fundamental, and, underlying both, the philosophical meaning.
Is the Language Tide Turning in Canada?
Is This Apartheid?: Aboriginal Reserves and Self-Government in Canada, 1960-1982
Isinamowin: The White Man's Indian
Issues in Art Therapy With the Culturally Displaced American Indian Youth
Issues of Respect: Reflections of First Nations Students' Experiences in Postsecondary Anthropology Classrooms
Looks at negative reactions for Indigenous students in a University Anthropology class and what can be learned to improve Indigenous education.
"It will kill us faster than the white invasion": Views on Alcohol and Other Drug Problems and HIV/AIDS Risk in the Canberra/Queanbeyan Aboriginal Community and on the Suitability of a 'Heroin Trial' for Aboriginal Heroin Users
Italy Celebrates Columbus: The Indian Rediscovered
J.R. Miller. Skyscrapers Hide the Heavens: A History of Indian-White Relations in Canada
The James Bay And Northern Quebec Agreement
And The Northeastern Quebec Agreement
Jaysho, Moasi, Dibeh, Ayeshi, Hasclishnih, Beshlo, Shush, Gini
Jimmie Durham: Postmodernist "Savage"
John Collier: Architect of Sovereignty or Assimilation?
[John Franklin Boyd]
Notes and sketches from a trip taken by John Franklin Boyd in July and August, 1885, from Minnedosa, Manitoba to visit Prince Albert and the places involved in the North-West Rebellion.