The Paper War: Morality, Print Culture, and Power in Colonial New South Wales
Peoples and Cultures of the Circumpolar World II: Module 1: Introduction
Perceived Health Benefits From a Commitment to Speak te reo Māori in the Home: Four Women's Perspectives
Pharmaceutical Health Care and Inuit Language Communications in Nunavut, Canada
Photo Vignette – T’łisalagi’ lakw School, ‘Yalis (Alert Bay), BC, early days
Piecing Together Māori, Word by Word
Plants in Language and Classification among BC First Nations
The Policy Implications of Revitalizing Traditional Aboriginal Religions
Discusses religious revitalization by using the analogy of language revitalization.
Chapter eleven from Learning, Technology, and Traditions, which is vol. 6 in the Aboriginal Policy Research series.
Originally presented at the Aboriginal Policy Research Conference, 2009.
Portrait of the Situation for English-speaking First Nations: Accessing Health and Social Services in English in the Province of Québec: Final Research Report
Focus groups, interviews and questionnaires were used to gather information about general access and language and culture issues, positive experiences accessing services and suggestions for improvement.
Predictors of Obesity Among Métis Children: Socio-economic, Behavioural and Cultural Factors
The Preservation of Canadian Indigenous Language and Culture Through Educational Technology
Proof-sheets of a Bibliography of the Languages of the North American Indians
Quantification of Interplaying Relationships between Wellbeing Priorities of Aboriginal Peoples in Remote Australia
Quebec First Nations Regional Health Survey - 2008: Chapter 1: Sociodemographic Characteristics
Quebec First Nations Regional Health Survey - 2008: Chapter 4: Residential Schools
The Quest of Shiman-Chu: Questioning the Absolutes of Language, Culture, and Being
Report: Annotated Bibliography of Available Studies on Elders in Nunavik
Focus is research studies on and consultations done with elders from 1992 to 2012. Sources for list were interviews with scholars and institutions focused on Inuit research and keyword searches in academic journals and databases, as well as non-scientific online sources.
Reviving Kaqchikel Language in Sumpango, Sacatepequez
Rhetoric, Discourse and the Surplus of Meaning: Innovations in First Nations' Language Bible Translation
Saving Our Identity: An Uphill Battle for the Tuva of China
Scrip
Sites of Indigenous Language Practice: Geography of American Indian Language Policy
Social Media: Facilitating Revitalization in Endangered Midwestern Native American Languages
Some Historical Names and Places of the Canadian Northwest
A Specimen of the Micmac Dictionary: Being Prepared at the Expense of the Dominion Government of Canada
Spoken from the Heart: Indigenous Radio in Canada
StatsUpdate: Aboriginal Peoples in Canada: Focus on Inuit in Nunavut, 2011 National Household Survey (NHS)
StatsUpdate: Labour Force, Education and Language Used at Work, 2011 National Household Survey (NHS)
Staying Segeju: Young Activist Researchers from an Indigenous East African People Fight Forced Integration Campaigns among Swahili Coast Communities
Stitching Together Literacy, Culture & Well-being: The Potential of Non-formal Learning Programs
Stories from Parents: Raising Proud Inuk Children - "It Starts at Home"
Health Science Thesis (MSc) -- McMaster University, 2019.
Stories from the Land: Indigenous Place Names in Canada
Strengthening the Integration of Traditional Knowledge in Environmental Impact Assessment: An Analysis of Inuit Place Names Near Steensby Inlet, NU
Table 1: Proportion of Aboriginal Identity Population, First Nations People, Métis and Inuit for Selected Aboriginal Language Indicators, Canada, 2011
Table 2: Percentage Distribution of the Population by Knowledge of Official Languages for Selected Aboriginal Identity Categories, Canada, 2011
Table 3: Population Who Reported an Aboriginal Mother Tongue, Population Who Reported an Ability to Conduct a Conversation in an Aboriginal Language and Population who Reported an Ability to Conduct a Conversation in an Aboriginal Language That is Not Their Mother Tongue, For Selected Aboriginal Identity Categories, Canada, 2011
Table 4: Population Who Reported an Aboriginal Mother Tongue and Population who Reported an Aboriginal Mother Tongue but who Could not Conduct a Conversation in that Language, for Selected Aboriginal Identity Categories, Canada, 2011
Table 5: Total Population and Population who Reported an Ability to Conduct a Conversation in an Aboriginal Language for Selected First Nations Population Groups, Canada, 2011
Table 6: Total Inuit Population and Inuit Population who Reported an Ability to Conduct a Conversation in an Inuit Language by Area of Residence--Inuit Nanangut, Canada, 2011
Taking Care of the Ancestral Language: The Language Revitalization of Non-Status Sámi in Finnish Sápmi
A Tale of One City, Two Languages: Palín, Guatemala
Teaching Creole-Speaking Children: Issues, Concerns and Resolutions for the Classroom
Technology’s Role in Mapudungun Language Teaching and Revitalization
Telling Stories in the Face of Danger: Language Renewal in Native American Communities
“They Grow as Speakers, as Leaders”: A Case Study of Experiential Leadership in the Miss World Eskimo– Indian Olympics Pageant
Ti wa7 szwatenem. What We Know: Indigenous Knowledge and Learning
Total Population Aged 15 Years and Over by Language Spoken Most Often at Work, for Nunavut and its Communities, 2011 NHS (National Household Survey)
Voice, Vision and Leadership: A Place for All: Final Report of the Joint Task Force on Improving Education and Employment Outcomes for First Nations and Métis People
“We Are Not Privileged Enough to Have That Foundation of Language”: Pasifika Young Adults Share their Deep Concerns about the Decline of the Ancestral/Heritage Languages in Aotearoa New Zealand
Lanuola Asiasiga