Cultural Safety and Humility Case Study Report
Cultural Safety: Honoring Traditional Ways of Life
Cultural Safety Training for Health Professionals Working with Indigenous Populations in Montreal, Quebec
Cultural Shrines Revisited
Cultural Strengths and Challenges in Implementing a System of Care Model in American Indian Communities
A Culturally Specific Approach: Developing A Métis Methodology for HIV Research
Culture and Language: The Political Realities to Keep Trickster at Bay
Culture and Professional Education: The Experiences of Native American Social Workers
Culture-Based School Mathematics for Reconciliation and Professional Development
Related material: Interview with teacher participant.
Culture in the Making: The Yavapé of Central Arizona, 1860-1935
The Culture is Prevention Project: Adapting the Cultural Connectedness Scale for Multi-Tribal Communities
Cumulative Effects Assessment for the Northern River Basins Study
Curbing Cultural Appropriation in the Fashion Industry
Current Directions in Aboriginal Law / Justice in Canada
Curtain Within: The Management of Social and Symbolic Classification Among the Masset Haida
Cybersafety for an Indigenous Youth Population
Dakota & Lakota Traditional Games Resource
Dakota games included: Kaƞsu kutepi (They shoot the plum seed); Tasiha uƞpi (Foot bone game); Hokṡina itazipe 9Young boy’s archery); Tahuka caƞhdeṡka (Hoop and arrow); Caƞkawacipina (Spinning tops and whip); and Takapsicapi (Lacrosse).
Lakota games included: Icaslohe econpi (Game of bowls); Inyan onyeyapi (A rock sling); Ipahotonpi (Popgun; Napsiyohli (Small Finger Ring); Tateka yumunpi (Wind Buzzer); and Tate kahwogyapi (Wind Chaser – They are chasing the wind).
The Dakota War: The United States Army versus the Sioux; Six Weeks in the Sioux Tepees: A Narrative of Indian Captivity
Daphne Odjig
Dare to Compare: Americanizing the Holocaust
Data or Dogma? A Reply to Robert L. Berner
Davis Inlet: 'I'll Never Stop Sniffing Gas'
The Dawn of Translation
Days Gone By
(De)colonizing Academe: Knowing Our Relations
(De)Constructing The “Lazy Indian”: An Historical Analysis of Welfare Reform in Canada
De Kiksuyapo! (Remember This!): Dakota Language, History, and Identity in the Eli Taylor Narratives
Dead Man, Dead West
Deadly Detectives: How Aboriginal Australian Writers are Re-creating Crime Fiction
Dealing with Shame and Unresolved Trauma: Residential School and Its Impact on the 2nd and 3rd Generation Adults
[A Death Feast in Dimlahamid]
Decades of Doing: Indigenous Women Academics Reflect on the Practices of Community-Based Health Research
Decentering Durham
Decision on Duck Creek: Two Green Bay Reservations and Their Boundaries, 1816-1996
A Declaration of Indian Rights: The BC Indian Position Paper (excerpt)
Declaration of the International Indigenous Women's Forum
Decolonizing Attribution: Traditions of Exclusion
Decolonizing Diabetes
Researchers use a decolonizing approach in this study; interviewed 22 people from a First Nations community in Northern Ontario to explore the lived experience and perceptions about developing the disease. Findings indicate a need for culturally appropriate care.
Decolonizing Motherhood: Exampining Birthing Experiences of Urban Indigenous Women in Nova Scotia
Sociology Thesis (MA) -- Acadia University, 2019.
Decolonizing Nunavut's Art Market
Art History Thesis (PhD) - York University, 2019.
Decolonizing Public Places and Public Memory: Kingston Ontario
Decolonizing the Medium: How Indigenous Creators are Defying "Sidekickery” and Centering Indigenous Stories and Characters in the Comics Landscape
Decolonizing Tribal Histories
Deep Organizing and Indigenous Studies Legislation in Oregon
Highlights the implementation of Oregon's Senate Bill 13, an effort to include more Indigenous history and perspectives into the state's schools curriculum.
Deer Hunting: An Innovative Teaching Paradigm to Educate Indigenous Youth about Physical Literacy
Defining the Indefinable: Descriptors of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Peoples' Cultures and Their Links to Health and Wellbeing: A Literature Review
Delgamuukw and the Protection of Aboriginal Land Interests
Argues that determining the "extent to which title-holders have control over Aboriginal title lands," requires that the fiduciary responsibility of the Crown be considered as well.