International Best Practices for Indigenous Engagement in Major Energy Projects: Building Partnerships on the Path to Reconciliation: Report of the Standing Committee on Natural Resources
International Disaster Risk Reduction Strategies and Indigenous Peoples
The Interpersonal Skills of Community-Engaged Scholarship: Insights From Collaborators Working at the University of Saskatchewan’s Community Engagement Office
Interpretive Guide & Hands-on Activities: Nitssaakita’paispinnaan: We Are Still in Control
An Interrogation of Research on Caribbean Social Issues: Establishing the Need for an Indigenous Caribbean Research Approach
Anabel Fernandez-Santana
Intersections between Violence and Health Promotion Among Indigenous Women Living in Canada
Intersections of Indigenous and Environmental History in Canada
Intertribal Integration: The Ethnological Argument in Duro v. Reina
An Interview with Annie Stone
An Interview with Susan Point
"Intratribal Cooperation and Communications: Is Consensus Possible?"
Intriguing Archaeological Find Made At Wanuskewin
Introduction
An introduction to a special issue on climate change and its effects on arctic communities. For English scroll down to page 15.
Introduction
Introduction: A Holistic Approach to Indigenous Peoples’ Rights to Cultural Heritage
Introduction [Behavioral Health Issues Among American Indians and Alaska Natives]
Introduction: Brothers and Sisters in Arms
Introduction: Fraud in Native American Communities: Essays in Honor of Suzan Shown Harjo
Introduction: Rethinking Blackness and Indigeneity in the Light of Settler Colonial Theory
Introduction: The Canadian Journal of Native Studies
Introduction: The North and the First World War
Introduction to Document One
Introduction and letter from Indian Agent dated June 4th, 1895 to his superior regarding abuse taking place at the school. Recommends that a teacher should be brought before the Magistrate, fined, and dismissed.
Introduction to Documents Two and Three
Introduction and two archival items discuss the employment of Aboriginals in the agricultural sector. The first deals with the Dept. of Indian Affairs efforts to recruit them as migrant farm workers. The second discusses the exclusion of farm workers from protection under labour laws. Taken from the 1966 National Agricultural Manpower Committee Meeting.
Introduction: ``To Get There it Had to Walk Through Hell``
Introduction to the Canadian Historical Review Forum on the Truth and Reconciliation Commission
Introduction to the Special Issue: Reconciling Research: Perspectives on Research Involving Indigenous Peoples
Inuit Attitudes towards Co-Managing Wildlife in Three Communities in the Kivalliq Region of Nunavut, Canada
Inuit Crafts in Broughton Island, Northwest Territories: Producer and Consumer Influences
Inuit Exposure to Organochlorines Through The Aquatic Food Chain in Arctic Québec
The Inuit Food System: Ecological, Economic and the Environmental Dimensions of the Nutrition Transition
Inuit Girls Make Media: Resisting Stereotypes through Participatory Research
Inuit Interpreters Engaged in End-of-Life Care in Nunavik, Northern Quebec
Inuit Investment Strategies in Northern Development: The Case of the Makivik Corporation in Northern Quebec
Inuit Language Loss in Nunavut: Analysis, Forecast, and Recommendations
Inuit Literature in English: A Chronological Survey
Inuit Nunangat Region Community Well-Being Scores by Census Year [1981-2016]
Inuit Participation in the Wage and Land-based Economies of Inuit Nunangat
Inuit Perceptions of Learning and Formal Education in the Canadian Arctic
The Inuit Sky
Inuit Statistics: An Analysis of the Categories Used in Government Data Collections
Inuit Stories of Being and Rebirth: Gender, Shamanism, and the Third Sex
Inuit Symbolism of the Bearded Seal
Inuit Youth: Growth and Change in the Canadian Arctic
Inuit Youth in a Changing World
Inuktitut in Ontario: Best Practices Research Report
Invasive Species, Indigenous Stewards, and Vulnerability Discourse
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.