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The Long Journey Home, 96 Miles Up the Porcupine River / Ch’oodeenjik, Yukon
Lost and Forgotten: Sex Workers on Vancouver's Downtown Eastside
The Lost Inuit of Franklin Bay
"Lower Than the Angels": The Weight of Jim Logan's Art
Making the Coming Home Map
Making the Leap: The Poetry of César Vallejo and Ralph Salisbury
Mana Tangata: The Five Optimal Cultural Conditions for Māori Student Success
Looks at the Mana Model, that uses cultural pride as a tool to improve student success.
Manitoba Inuit Association’s Rapid Response to Include an Inuit Identifier within Manitoba COVID-19 Diagnostic Tests
Manitoba’s Aboriginal Justice Inquiry: 1988-1990
Maori Language Revitalisation: New Zealand Government Magnanimity
Highlights the role of the New Zealand government in the decline and revitalization of the te reo Maori language.
Mäori Responses to COVID-19
Marie Baldwin, Racism, and the Society of American Indians
Measurements of Navajo and Hopi Brain Dominance and Learning Styles
Medicine River
Medicines at Standing Rock: Stories of Native Healing through Survivance
A MELUS Interview: Joy Harjo
Métis Women Gathering: Visiting Together and Voicing Wellness for Ourselves
Micmac Migration to Western Newfoundland
Mission To The Micmac
Mixed-blood: Indigenous-Black Identity in Colonial Canada
Modeling the Impact of the COVID-19 Pandemic on First Nations, Metis, and Inuit Communities: Some Considerations
Examines the importance of having readily available data for the purpose of planning and policy making.
More Than Words: Outlining Preconditions to Collaboration Among First Nations, the Federal Government, and the Provincial Government
Looks at the work towards creating a more collaborative relationship between the different levels of government and its Indigenous populations. In particular the articles focuses on the precondition phase of the collaboration process.
Mourning Dove's Canadian Recovery Years, 1917-1919
Discusses the period in Christine Quintasket's life when her health improved and she regained the strength to pursue her ambitions as a writer.
Moving Forward: No Scientific Integrity without an Acknowledgment of Past Wrongs
Moving From Patriarchal Benevolence to Relationship: Walking Humbly With Indigenous People
Discusses the use of Indigenous worldviews by non-Indigenous educators to more effectively teach Indigenous students in Indigenous communities.
Moving Towards a Language Nest: Stories and Insights from nḱmalqs
Looks at the language nest as way to promote language revitalization with Sylix children.
Multiple Jeopardy: A Socio-economic Comparison of Men and Women among the Indian, Metis and Inuit Peoples of Canada
N. Scott Momaday: A Man of Words
NAGPRA's Politics of Recognition: Repatriation Struggles of a Terminated Tribe
National Revival or National Burden: A Critical Examination of Discourses on Indigenous Birth, Population Growth and Demography
An overview of the predominant narrative of high Indigenous fertility rates. Contrasts the systematic response to that narrative in Canada to views held within Indigenous cultures.
Native Language Broadcasting: An Experiment in Empowerment
Native Participation in Northern Development: The Impending Crisis in the NWT
Native Rights and the 21st Century: The Making of Red Power
Native Women in Reserve Politics: Strategies and Struggles
Navajo Games
'A New Mexican Rebecca': Imaging Pueblo Women
A New Paradigm in Canadian Indian Policy for the 1990s
Nez Perce College and Career Readiness: Wíiwyeteq’is "Growing into an Elder"
Discusses the Nez Perce Mentoring Project (NPMP) and the way it can prepare Indigenous youth for successful careers.
Nineteenth Century Women and Reform: The Women's National Indian Association
The Nishga and the Fur Trade, 1834-1842
“No One Cares More About Your Community Than You”: Approaches to Healing With Secwépemc Children and Youth
Looks at Secwépemc healers storytelling to provide a form of healing for Indigenous children and youth.
A Northern Lawyer
The Northwest Territories Residential Southern Placement Program: Dislocation and Colonization through ‘Care’
Looks at the Residential Southern Placement Program as an extension of colonization by the removal of Indigenous populations with cognitive disabilities from the Northwest Territories.
Now Is the Time
Reviews Haida filmmaker Christopher Auchter short film Now Is the Time. The films acts as a sequel to the 1970 National Film Board of Canada short film This Was the Time documenting the raising of the first totem pole on Haida Gwaii. To view article scroll down to page 130.
Now That the Door Is Open: First Nations and the Law School Experience
Nunamiut, the Tundra Dwellers
Looks at the history and variations of the use of the Inuit word Nuna in describing the Arctic landscape.
Nunavut Urban Futures: Vernaculars, Informality and Tactics
Examines the growing urbanization of the Canadian North that clashes with the traditional Inuit lifestyle and how culturally reflective approaches may help with the transition.