Indian Participation in Health Policy Development: Implications for Adult Education
An Indian Perspective of Self-Esteem
Looks at Indigenous child development through the use of a medicine wheel.
Includes a report from the Cariboo Tribal Council, today known as the Northern Shuswap Tribal Council, entitled "Faith Misplaced: Lasting Effects of Abuse in a First Nations Community".
Indian Policies of Great Britain and the United States in the Pacific Northwest in the Mid-Nineteenth Century
Indian Residential Schooling: The Native Perspective
Indian School Days
"Indian Self-Government" as a Technique of Domination
Indian Shaker Religion
Indian: Sociological Identification and Political Consequence
Indian Sovereignty: What Does It Mean?
Indian Students’ Academic Self-Concept and Their Perceptions of Teacher and Parent Aspirations for Them in a Band-Controlled School and a Provincial School
Looks at both the effects of Indigenous band-controlled schools on Indigenous students.
Indian Trappers in the North-West - [H.P. Shore]. - Sketch. - 12 December 1885.
[ "Indian Treaties". The National Atlas of Canada]
Indian Water Rights in British Columbia: A Handbook
Indian Water Rights Settlements: A Case Study in the Rhetoric of Implementation
The Indigenous International Diplomacy of Indian Territory
Indigenous Media: Faustian Contract or Global Village?
Indignation of French-Canadians Over the Execution of Louis Riel / A Mob Burning an Effigy of Sir John Macdonald on the Pedestal of the Queen's Statue, Victoria Square, Montreal, Nov. 16, 1885. - Sketch. - 28 November 1885.
Individual versus Collective Rights: Aboriginal People and the Significance of Thomas v. Norris
Individualism or Tribalism?: The "Dialectic" of Indian Policy
Ingelba and the Five Black Matriarchs
Injury Prevention Awareness in an Urban Native American Population
The Insider-Outsider Dialectic in Native Socio-Economic Development: A Case Study in Process Understanding
"Inspector Dickens Journal" Fort Pitt, 1885.
Historical note:
Institutionalizing Inherent Aboriginal Rights: A First Nations Province
L' Insurrection du Nord-Ouest, 1885
Interior of Fort Pitt, Just [Before] the Rebellion of 1885
Interview Tape #2 with Agnes Amyotte Fisher and Celina Amyotte Poitras
Interview with Agnes Amyotte Fisher and Celina Amyotte Poitras
Introducing Our Guest Editor in Western Australia
Introduction
Introduction [Studies in American Indian Literatures, Series 2, vol.3 no.2]
Introduction to the Special Issue
The Inuit Community Workers' Experience of Youth Protection
Inuit Redistribution and Development: Processes of Change in the Eastern Canadian Arctic, 1922-1968
An Investigation of Locus of Control in Dene and Non-Dene Students
Investigations into the Present and Future State of Aboriginal Mental Health
An Iron Hand Upon the People: The Law Against the Potlatch on the Northwest Coast
Irony and Indians: A Collection of Original Fiction
Is That All There Is? Tribal Literature
Discussion on stories that make up tribal literature and the fact that all words have three levels of meaning: the surface, the fundamental, and, underlying both, the philosophical meaning.
Isinamowin: The White Man's Indian
Issue of Self-Determination Avoided: U.N. Working Group on Indigenous Populations
J.R. Miller. Skyscrapers Hide the Heavens: A History of Indian-White Relations in Canada
Janet R. Fietz
Jim Groves Interview
Joe Blondeau Interview
Joe McAuley Remembers: "Today Everything Is Different"
Joe Morin: "I Told Myself I Shouldn't Have Come"
Joe Sylvester Interview
Consists of an interview with Joe Sylvester where he gives an account of Indian medicine; legends concerning migration of Algonquin Indians; the role of elders; of the deterioration of reservation conditions following World War II; the religious significance of the number "four"; views on welfare and its role in disrupting traditional Indian values; and a legend about the origin of the drum.