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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.
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.
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
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.
“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.
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.
Opinions and Perceptions of Indigenous Mental Health Applications from Service Providers and Youth Samples: A Pilot Study
Ọsẹ Dúdú: Exploring the Benefits of Yoruba Indigenous Black Soap in Southwest, Nigeria
“Ours from the top to the very bottom”: Seneca Land, Colonial Development, Proto-Conservation, and Resistance in the Early American Republic
Parent Educational Level and Motivation Among Native American Adolescents: The Mediating Role of School Belonging
Looks at the need for a sense of belonging to achieve educational success for Indigenous students.
The Paths to Realizing Reconciliation: Indigenous Consultation in Jasper National Park
Using interviews from the Jasper Indigenous Forum (JIF) the authors examines the struggle for Indigenous representations into how their culture is presented.
Pedagogical Pathways for Indigenous Business Education: Learning from Current Indigenous Business Practices
Pekiwewin (coming home): Advancing Good Relations with Indigenous People Experiencing Homelessness
Pigiasilluta oKalagiamik: Culturally Relevant Assessment in Nunatsiavut
Examines how school based assessments impact Inuit students and the strength of culturally relevant curriculum.
Place-Based Sustainability Planning: Implications & Recommendations for Rural Northwestern Ontario
The Plains Cree Connective Stones Theory: Earth-Sky Vertebral Spines and Umbilical Cords
Using an Indigenous sweat lodge ceremony to analyze the connective stones theory as a research tool.
Playing (the Casino) Indian: Native American Roles in Peak TV
A Postcolonial Discourse Analysis of Community Stakeholders’ Perspectives on Supporting Urban Indigenous Older Adults to Age Well in Ottawa, Canada
Prevalence and Determinants of Asthma Among Aboriginal Adolescents in Canada
Prevalence of Major Stressful Life Events and Mental Health Symptoms of American Indian and Alaska Native Adolescents in Hawai'i
A Principled Approach to Research Conducted with Inuit, Métis, and First Nations People: Promoting Engagement Inspired by the CIHR Guidelines for Health Research Involving Aboriginal People (2007-2010)
Examines the use of the Canadian Institutes of Health Research guidelines to guide the collaboration between researchers and Indigenous communities.
Prisoning Indigenous Women: Strength and Resilience in the Face of Systemic Trauma
Promoting Inuit Health through a Participatory Whiteboard Video
Proposed Administrative Tribunal Policies Concerning Indigenous Ecological Knowledge and Values, and the Duty to Consult
The Quest for Representative Juries in the Northwest Territories
Questions about Questions: Law and Film Reflections on the Duty to Learn
RAVEN (De)Briefs Podcast: Indigenous Law in Action
Re-membering Cherokee Justice in Ruth Muskrat Bronson's "The Serpent"
Reconciling Inuit Elders' Long-Term Care Needs
Looks at the lack of adequate health care for the Inuit elderly within their own communities and Canada's Inuit aging policies.
Reflections on a Meaningful Architecture: The Symbolic and Material Universes of the Home for the Inuit of Nunavik
Using a literary review to identify the cultural importance of Inuit housing and its reflection of Inuit values.
Refusing Settler Epistemologies and Maintaining an Indigenous Future for Tolay Lake, Sonoma County, California
Reimagining Indigenous Spaces of Healing: Institutional Environmental Repossession
A Rejoinder to Body Bags: Indigenous Resilience and Epidemic Disease, from COVID-19 to First “Contact”
Relationally Responsive Standpoint
Looks at how Indigenous Standpoint Theory can reflect in their research experiences for Indigenous post-secondary students.
Relationships and the Creation of Colonial Landscapes in the Eighteenth- Century Fur Trade
Relocating to a New or Pre-existing Social Housing Unit: Significant Health Improvements for Inuit Adults in Nunavik and Nunavut
Relocating Yuquot: The Indigenous Pacific and Transpacific Migrations
Resilience and Stress among Hopi Female Caregivers
Restorative Narrative: Nonfiction and the Resetting of the Grasslands' Future
Risk and Protective Factors with Native American Indian and Alaska Native Children Who Have a History of Suicidal Hehavior
Looks at the factors that lead to suicide attempts amongst Indigenous children in America.