Indigenous New Media Arts: Narrative Threads and Future Imaginaries
Indigenous Peoples Atlas of Canada: Teacher's Kit for Giant Floor Map
Topics include climate change, demographics, Indigenous governance, housing, human rights, Indigenous languages, migration, famous people, original place names, residential schools, seasonal cycles, symbols, timeline, trade routes, and treaties, land disputes, agreements and rights.
Although activities were created for the giant floor map, they can be adapted to the printable tile version.
Indigenous Trauma Is Not a Frontier: Breaking Free from Colonial Economies of Trauma and Responding to Trafficking, Disappearances, and Deaths of Indigenous Women and Girls
Indigenous Women's Writing and the Cultural Study of Law
The Influence of Shifting Pacific Identities in Learning: The Experience of Parents Raising Children of Mixed Pacific Ethnicities
Inside Out: An Indigenous Community Radio Response to Incarceration in Western Australia
International Disaster Risk Reduction Strategies and Indigenous Peoples
An Interrogation of Research on Caribbean Social Issues: Establishing the Need for an Indigenous Caribbean Research Approach
Anabel Fernandez-Santana
"Intratribal Cooperation and Communications: Is Consensus Possible?"
Introduction: Fraud in Native American Communities: Essays in Honor of Suzan Shown Harjo
Introduction: Rethinking Blackness and Indigeneity in the Light of Settler Colonial Theory
Introduction to the Canadian Historical Review Forum on the Truth and Reconciliation Commission
It Consumes What It Forgets
Jurisprudential Challenges
Keeoukaywin: The Visiting Way—Fostering an Indigenous Research Methodology
Kim Scott's Benang and the Removal of Identity in Australian Aboriginal Literature
Kinship Care: A Community Alternative to Foster Care
Labrador Inuit on the Hunt: Seasonal Patterns, Techniques, and Animals as They Appear in the Early Moravian Diaries
Lakota Women's Traditional Dress of the Last Half of the Twentieth Century
Land Claims [Part One]
Land Claims [Part Two]
The Land Is Our History: Indigeneity, Law, and the Settler State
Language Use and Language Socialization in Bilingual Homes in Inuit Communities
Legal and Tribal Identity in Gerald Vizenor’s The Heirs of Columbus
Liminal Landscapes: Motion, Perspective, and Place in Gerald Vizenor’s Fiction
Literary Land Claims: The "Indian Land Question" from Pontiac's War to Attawapiskat
Living in a (Schrödinger’s) Box: Jimmie Durham’s Strategic Use of Ambiguity
Living in the Land of Death: The Choctaw People, 1830-1860
Living with the Past: The Creation of the Stolen Generation Positionality
Local Values in Governance: Legacy of Choho in Forest and School Management in a Tamang Community in Nepal
MAI Te Kupenga: Supporting Māori and Indigenous Doctoral Scholars within Higher Education
Māori Decolonization Through the Te Tīmatanga
Haka
Masi Methodology: Centring Pacific Women’s Voices in Research
Men, Masculinity, and the Indian Act
[Métis Registries]
Métis Rights, Daniels and Reconciliation
Métis-specific Bibliography for the BCcampus Indigenization Project
Molecular Death and Redface Reincarnation: Indigenous Appropriations in the US and Canada
Speakers discuss the issue of who and what defines Indigenous identity, settler-state's practice of imposing their definitions, the phenomenon of "playing Indian", and broader social interpretations of court decisions such as Daniels.
Duration: 1:59:35. Presentations are part of the conference "Daniels: In and Beyond the Law" held at University of Alberta, Jan. 26-27, 2017.
Moondani Yulenj: An Examination of Aboriginal Culture, Identity and Education: Artefact and Exegesis
Moving Towards an Indigenous Research Process: A Reflexive Approach to Empirical Work with First Nations Communities in Canada
My Reflection of that Time
Narratives of Hope: Enacting Indigenous Language and Cultural Reclamation across Geographies and Positionalities
A Nation of Families: Traditional Indigenous Kinship, the Foundation for Cheyenne Sovereignty
Native American Documentary: An Emerging Genre?
Native American Fashion: Inspiration, Appropriation, and Cultural Identity
Native American Identity: A Review of Twenty-first Century Research
Native American Turnout in the 1990 and 1992 Elections
Native Media's Communities
Native Narratives: The Representation of Native Americans in Public Broadcasting
Looks at radio and television coverage of key events or issues in both non-Native American-produced and Native American-created programs found in the American Archive of Public Broadcasting collection. Divided into five sections: (Mis)Representations of Native Americans; Termination, Relocation, and Restoration; The American Indian Movement; Native Americans in Contemporary News Media; and Visual Sovereignty: Native-Created Public Media.