Inutsiaqpagutit - That Which Enables You To Have a Good Life: Supporting Inuit Early Life Health
Inuvialuit Language and Identity: Perspectives on the Symbolic Meaning of Inuvialuktun in the Canadian Western Arctic
The Inuvialuit Living History Project
Project generates and documents Inuvialuit and curatorial knowledge about the objects in the MacFarlane Collection. Entire issue on one pdf.
To access article, scroll to page 43.
The Invasion of Indian Country in the Twentieth Century: American Capitalism and Tribal Natural Resources
Invasive Species, Indigenous Stewards, and Vulnerability Discourse
Inventory of Profiles: Existing Patient Identification Systems with Ethnocultural Identifiers Specific to First Nations, Inuit, and Métis Peoples in Canada
Investigating Cowichan River Collaborative Salmon Management Institutions: The Cowichan Harvest Roundtable and the Traditional Cowichan Fish Weir
Investigating Māori Approaches to Trauma Informed Care
Investigating the Utility of Birds in Precontact Yup'ik Subsistence: A Preliminary Analysis of the Avian Remains from Nunalleq
Highlights the important role of birds for precontact Yup'ik as a soruce of food and material culture.
An Investigation into the Policies of Assimilation and Self-Determination Resulting in the Epidemic of Violence against Indigenous Women in Canada and the United States
Investing in Canada's Future Prosperity: An Economic Opportunity for Canadian Industries: Methods and Sources Paper
The Invisible Nation
Invitations to Dignity and Well-being: Cultural Safety Through Indigenous Pedagogy, Witnessing and Giving Back!
Ironic Confrontation as a Mode of Resistance: The Homeland Security T- Shirt at the Dakota Access Pipeline Protests
The Iroquois Perspective
Iroquois Use of Customary Haudenosaunee and United States Law in Opposing Removal
Is a Structured, Manualized, Evidence-Based Treatment Protocol Culturally Competent and Equivalently Effective Among American Indian Parents in Child Welfare?
Is Canada Postcolonial?: Re-Asking through "The Forgotten" Project
Is Diversity a Mask or a Bridge? The Indian Mascot Debate
Is Galore "Our" Story?
Is Green the New Black? The Representation of Indigenous Australians in the News Media Covering Environmental Affairs
"Is It Safe?" Risk Perception and Drinking Water in a Vulnerable Population
Is Social Media Only for White Women?: From #METOO to #MMIW
Iskigamizigedaa: Let's Boil Maple Sugar
Colouring storybook features a grandparent and grandchildren engaging in conversations about traditional teachings, when to begin and end harvesting, the equipment used, and processing and use of maple sugar. Text in English with some Ojibwe words interspersed.
"Iskwĕwak Mīwayawak": Women Feeling Healthy: A Photovoice Project: Draft Final Report Summary
Isomorphism and Organizational Culture: A First Nation's Housing Initiative
The Issue of Indigenous Underrepresentation in Canadian Criminal Juries
[Isuma: The Art and Imagination of Ruben Anton Komangapik]
It Consumes What It Forgets
'It Had to be my Choice": Indigenous Smoking Cessation and Negotiations of Risk, Resistance and Resilience
"It Happened to Me in Barkerville": Aboriginal Identity, Economy, and Law in the Cariboo Gold Rush, 1862--1900
History Thesis (MA) -- University of Northern British Columbia, 2012.
“It’s All about the Scenery”: Tourists’ Perceptions of Cultural Ecosystem Services in the Lofoten Islands, Norway
"It's huge in First Nation culture for us, as a school, to be a role model": Facilitators and Barriers Affecting School Nutrition Policy Implementation in Alexander First Nation
It's Not a Poem. It's My Life: Navajo Singing Identities
It Sometimes Speaks to Us: Decolonizing Education by Utilizing Our Elders' Knowledge
Ithaka S+R Report Research Support Services for the Field of Indigenous Studies: A Local Report by the University of Toronto Libraries
Ittoqqortoormiit et le Développement Touristique dans le Scoresby Sund (Groenland)
Ivory versus Antler: A Reassessment of Binary Structuralism in the Study of Prehistoric Eskimo Cultures
Iwi Exhibitions at Te Papa: a Ngāi Tahu Perspective
J. Z. LaRocque: A Métis Historian’s Account of His Family’s Experiences during the North-West Rebellion of 1885
Discusses Joseph Zépherin LaRocque, born in Lebret, Saskatchewan, who was one of the very few Métis vernacular historians writing in the early 20th century.