Literature Review for the Congress of Aboriginal Peoples: Off-Reserve Indigenous Housing Needs and Challenges in Canada
Review conducted to "identify the relationships, correlations, and possible causations between housing and four socio-economic outcomes: education, health, the labour market, and Indigenous languages."
Living in a Cruel Limbo: A Guide to Investigating Cold Missing Person Cases
Living Language, Resurgent Radio: A Survey of Indigenous Language Broadcasting Initiatives
Looks at examples of community-led and community-based and state-sponsored community-run broadcasting systems from around the world.
Localizing Treaty Education
Designed for Grade 12 Social Studies classes. Focuses on the numbered treaties signed in Manitoba.
Looking Back on Darwin
Louis 'David' Riel: "Prophet of the New World"
Louis Riel: Justice Must Be Done
Argues for a posthumous pardon of the Metis leader.
Louis Riel: Patriot or Rebel?
Maawndoonganan: Anishinaabe Resource Manual to Accompany the State Michigan Social Studies Standards
List of resources grouped by Grades K-4, 5-8, 9-12. Some are specific to Michigan, but most are general.
Maddie
Major Questions About Preservice Teachers to Indian Communities
Make Healing Happen: It's Time to Act
Discusses the complex needs of Stolen Generation survivors and their descendants.
Making a Whole Person: Traditional Inuit Education: Teaching Guide
Making Allyship Work: Allyship Perspectives in a Community-Based Research Study
MAKING MÉTIS PLACES IN BRITISH COLUMBIA: The Edge of the Métis Nation Homeland
Mamâhtâwisiwin
Education Capstone Project (MEd) -- University of Alberta, 2021.
Manito Ahbee Aki: The Place Where the Creator Sits: Educator Guide Phase 1 [The Forks]
Interactive game in which students travel back in time to become members of the Anishinaabe Nation in Manitoba before the European contact and engage in activities in which they learn about the environment, traditional worldviews, and a scared site called Manito Ahbee, and gain knowledge from Knowledge Keepers. Game is free, but students must register to play.
Manito Ahbee Aki: The Place Where the Creator Sits: Student Guide Phase 1 [The Forks]
Interactive game in which students travel back in time to become members of the Anishinaabe Nation in Manitoba before the European contact and engage in activities in which they learn about the environment, traditional worldviews, and a scared site called Manito Ahbee, and gain knowledge from Knowledge Keepers. Game is free, but students must register to play.
Manitoba and Canada's North-West: Founders and Builders
Special issue of Canadian Issues containing articles which focus on the Métis and the formation of Manitoba.
Manitoba's Red River Settlement: Manuscript Sources for Economic and Demographic History
Discusses Hudson's Bay Company's engagement (employment) registers, settler's accounts, census returns, and land registries and parish registers and genealogical affidavits, 1875.
Manitoba School Survey on Indigenous Languages Teaching: 2021 Report
Questions were asked about language programming, delivery and priority level, reasons for not having programming, and unfilled teaching positions.
Manufacturing Compliance with Anti-Indigenous Racism in Canadian Hockey: The Case of Beardy's Blackhawks.
Māori Centred Social Work Practice: Evidence Brief
Māori Victimisation in Aotearoa New Zealand: Results Drawn from Cycle 1 and 2 (2018/19) of the New Zealand Crime and Victims Survey
Marge La Framboise
Mary Two-Axe Earley: I Am Indian Again
Mashkiwenmi-daa Noojimowin: Let’s Have Strong Minds for the Healing
Statistics for number of investigations, substantiated investigations, and child, caregiver and household characteristics.
Mass Media and Community Development: A Case Study of the Newspaper Natotawin, Beauval, Saskatchewan
Me Tomorrow: Indigenous Views on the Future
Measuring Cultural Safety in Health Systems
Mechanisms for Indigenous Representation, Participation and Consultation in Constitutional Systems: International Examples to Inspire Chile
Medical Experimentation and the Roots of COVID-19 Vaccine Hesitancy among Indigenous Peoples in Canada
Medicinal Plants On Elcho Island
Medicine Boy and Other Cree Tales
Meeting Survivors’ Needs: Gender-Based Violence against Inuit Women and the Criminal Justice System Response: Environmental Scan
Related Material: Final Report; Online Survey Results.
Meeting Survivors’ Needs: Gender-Based Violence against Inuit Women and the Criminal Justice System Response: Online Survey Results
Related Material: Environmental Scan; Final Report.
Memory as Medicine: The Power of Recollection in "Ceremony"
Men's Perceptions of Gender Roles: Qanuilirpitaa? 2017: Nunavik Inuit Health Survey
Mental Health and Addictions System Performance in Ontario First Nations (2009-2019): Interim Report
Mental Health and Wellness: Qanuilirpitaa? 2017: Nunavik Inuit Health Survey
Mental Health Interventions for First Nations, Inuit, and Métis Peoples in Canada: A Systematic Review
An overview of 14 studies analyzing anxiety, depression and attempted suicide amongst the Indigenous Canadian populations and the use of culture as a treatment method.
The Mental Health Movement: Part 3 - Understanding the Trance
Mental Health Review of the Indigenous Police Services of Ontario
[Métis History & Identity: Lesson Plan]
Created for Grades 10-12.
Métis Peoples and Cancer: A Scoping Review of Literature, Programs, Policies and Educational Material in Canada
Métis Traditional Food Number 1
Lesson plan for Grades 1-4 involves students learning about bannock, fried Saskatoon berries, and goose, making bannock, and Michif words associated with cooking and food.
Métis Traditional Food Number 2
Lesson plan for Grades 4-7 involves students learning and speaking Michef words associated with food and cooking, learning about bannock, fried Saskatoon berries, and goose, and making bannock.
Middle Ear Disease, Hearing Loss and Educational Problems of American Indian Children
Mii maanda ezhi-gkendmaanh = This Is How I Know, Written by Brittany Luby, Illustrated by Joshua Mangeshig Pawis-Steckley, Translated by Alvin Ted Corbiere and Alan Corbiere
"An Anishinaabe child and her grandmother explore the natural wonders of each season in this lyrical, bilingual story-poem." Intended for use with ages 3 to 7.