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Aboriginal People and Canadian Geography: A Review of the Recent Literature
Aboriginal Peoples and Hegemony in Canada
Aboriginal Population of Canada: Growth Dynamics Under Conditions of Encounter of Civilisations
Aboriginal Reconciliation Still a Long Way to Go
The Aboriginal Right to Cultural Property
Aboriginal Women's Healing Lodge: Challenge to Penal Correctionalism?
Aboriginality and Historical Consciousness: Bernard O'Dowd and The Creation of an Australian National Imaginary
Alaas Khotunh: Association of Rural Women of the Sakha Republic (Yakutia)
Alaska Recovery and Spirit Camps: First Nations Community Development
Almighty Voice and His Stories
American Indian Ethnic Renewal: Politics and the Resurgence of Identity
American Indian Women's Poetry: Strategies of Rage and Hope
Americans and Other Aliens in the Navajo Historical Imagination in the Nineteenth Century
The Anasazi Legacy Is the Light of the Jurassic Sun
Andeans and Spaniards in the Contact Zone: A Gendered Collision
Appropriate Technologies in the Traditional Native American Smokehouse: Public Health Considerations in Tribal Community Development
Examines how the Swinomish Indian Tribal Community was able to build a ceremonial smokehouse and reduce the associated health risks, by applying appropriate technologies.
The Art of Being an Inuit Woman
‘At Dawn, Our Bellies Full’: Teaching Tales of Food and Resistance from Residential Schools and Internment Camps in Canada
Australian Diplomacy in a Policy Vacuum: Government and Aboriginal Affairs, 1961-62
Autobiographical Writing as a Healing Process: Interview with Alice Masak French
The Autobiographings of Mourning Dove
Discusses importance of three books: Cogewea the Half-Blood, Coyotes Stories, and Morning Dove: A Salishan Autobiography.
Beading the Multicultural World: Louise Erdrich's The Antelope Wife and the Sacred Metaphysic
Becoming Aboriginal: Experiences of a European Woman in Kamchatka's Wilderness
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
Benefits and Risks of Traditional Food for Indigenous Peoples: Focus on Dietary Intakes of Arctic Men
The Bingocentric Worlds of Michel Tremblay and Tomson Highway: Les Belles-Soeurs vs. The Rez Sisters
Looks at the parallels between two plays in terms of the subject matter and the dramatic techniques used. For example, bingo, is used as a symbol and illustration of women's consumerism and of the spiritual emptiness in their lives.
Blackfellas and Whitefellas: Aboriginal Land Rights, The Mabo Decision, and the Meaning of Land
The Book of Jessica: The Healing Circle of a Woman's Autobiography
Discusses a play, The Book of Jessica, that illustrates the struggle women have in understanding what being "a woman" means, including across the barriers of race, culture, privilege and age.
Breast-Feeding and Anemia: Let's Be Careful
Bringing the Law Back In: Legal Rights and the Regulation of Indian-White Relations on Rosebud Reservation
The British, the Indians, and Smallpox: What Actually Happened at Fort Pitt in 1763?
The Broken Crucible of Assimilation: Forest Grove Indian School and the Origins of Off-Reservation Boarding-School Education in the West
Using selected correspondence to explore the experiences of Indigenous students at Forest Grove Indian School in Oregon. The primary sources discussed are provided at the end of the article.