Witness: Pieces of History
Witnessing without Testimony: The Pedagogical Kairos of Canada's Truth and Reconciliation Commission
Wives and Husbands: Gender and Age in Southern Arapaho History
Wm. Scott and T. Pike in front of Humboldt Telegraph Station
Wolves: A Yukon Learning Resource
For use in classrooms from Kindergarten to Grade 10. Revised edition.
"Wolves Have a Constitution": Continuities in Indigenous Self-Government
Women Acknowledged For All That They Survived
Comments on stories heard at the Truth and Reconciliation Commission event held in Saskatoon, June 2012, especially those of women abused while at residential schools and when they returned to their communities.
Entire issue on one pdf. To access article scroll to p.10.
Women and Constructing Re-membering: Identity Formation in the Stolen Generations
Women and Ledger Art: Four Contemporary Native American Artists
Women, Children and Violence in Aboriginal Law: Some Perspectives From the Southeast Queensland Frontier
Women Ethnographers and Native Women Storytellers: Relational Science, Ethnographic Collaboration, and Tribal Community
Women For Women: Stories of Empowerment Activism in Northern Saskatchewan
Women, House, and Home in Contemporary Canadian Aboriginal Art: Hannah Claus, Rebecca Belmore, and Rosalie Favell
[Women's Work, Women's Art: Nineteenth Century Northern Athapaskan Clothing]
Wood Use and Kayak Construction: Material Selection From the Perspective of Carpentry
Woollen Blankets in Contemporary Art: Mutable and Mobile Materials in the Work of Sonny Assu
Working and Thinking Across Difference: A White Social Worker and an Indigenous World
Working Together: Key Success Criteria for Collaborative Initiatives Between Aboriginal Communities and Natural Resource Companies
Working Together to Enhance the Safety of Native Women: Addressing Trafficking and Prostitution as Crimes of Sexual Violence
Working Toward Transformation and Change: Exploring Non-Aboriginal Teachers’ Experiences in Facilitating and Strengthening Students’ Awareness of Indigenous Knowledge and Aboriginal Perspectives
Working with First Nations, Inuit and Métis Families Who Have Experienced Family Violence: A Practice Guide for Child Welfare Professionals
Working With First Nations: The Most Disadvantaged Group in Need of the Best Services Psychologists Can Offer
Working with Indigenous Peoples to Foster Sustainable Food Systems
Workplace RAP Barometer 2014
Workshopping A Little Creation : A Scenographic Approach to Theatre for Young Audiences, Oral Tradition and the Concrete Indian
The World Has Changed For Young People
"A World Where Butchers Sing Like Angels": German Poetry, Music, and (Counter) History in Louise Erdrich's The Master Butchers Singing Club
A World You Do Not Know: Settler Societies, Indigenous Peoples, and the Attack on Cultural Diversity
"Wouldn't Piss on Them If They Were on Fire": How Discrimination Against Sex Workers, Drug Users and Aboriginal Women Enabled a Serial Killer: Report of Independent Counsel
to the Commissioner of the Missing Women Commission of Inquiry
Wounded Carried to the Rear from the Fight at Fish Creek - Sketch. - 16 May 1885
Wrapping Our Ways around Them: Aboriginal Communities and the Child, Family and Community Service Act (CFCSA) Guidebook
Writing Against Erasure: Native American Students at Hampton Institute and the Periodical Press
Writing in Dust: Reading the Prairie Environmentally
Writing Inuit by Disney Comparing Representations of Inuit and Native American Folktales in Disney's Brother Bear
Writing Landscape
Writing Remembrance in Guatemala: The Process of Poetry
Written as I Remember It: Teachings (ʔəms taʔaw) From the Life of a Sliammon Elder
Written Oral History: Dimensions of Identity of Chukotka's Indigenous People in the Works of Rytkheu
WSANEC: Emerging Land or Emerging People
WWW Virtual Library - American Indians Website: Index of Native American Resources on the Internet
The Wyandot Nation of Kansas
Xʷay'Xʷəy' and Stanley Park: Performing History and Land
Xweliqwiya: The Life of a Stó:lō Matriarch
Yamǫ́rıa: The One Who Travels
Yamǫ́rıa was a powerful man who helped the ancient Dene by destroying giant animals, separating animals from humans, and giving laws to enable the people to live together in harmony.
Website contains links to biographies of Dene Elders and recorded stories by them and Dene legends, laws and artwork.
Yan Gaa Duuneek: An Examination of Indigenous Transformational Leadership Pedagogies in BC Higher Education
Yanantin and Masintin in the Andean World: Complementary Dualism in Modern Peru
Yanktonai Beadwork and Other Souvenir Items From Cannon Ball Community, North Dakota
Yellow Dirt: An American Story of a Poisoned Land and a People Betrayed
You Can Leave Home and Keep Culture Close
Looks at the accomplishments of a Lifetime Achievement award recipient, from Samson Cree First Nation, at the Dreamcatcher Foundation's award ceremony.
Entire issue on one pdf. To access article scroll to p.33.