First Nations Labour and Employment Development Survey (FNLED) Survey: 2022 Report
Results organized under six headings: demographics, language and culture, education and training, skills and work readiness, labour market indicators, and workplace wellbeing and culture.
First Nations, Métis and Inuit Experiences
First Nations/Quebec Incidence Study of Child Maltreatment and Serious Behaviour Problems Investigated by Child Protection Services in 2019
Uses a weighted sample of 2,211 First Nations children and 34,575 non-Indigenous children extracted from administrative databases of institutions which provided child protection services.
First Nations Status Northwest Territories [Map]
Fishing with Grandma: By Susan Avingaq and Maren Vsetula, Illustrated by Charlene Chua: Educator's Resource
Suitable for primary grades.
Flags at full mast outside the Prince Albert Tribal Council Office
Flags of the Métis
Flinders Island Aboriginal Assoc. Inc.: Health Work On Flinders Island
FNLED Peoples Report: 2018-2020
Results from 1,350 individuals living in 25 communities. Respondents were asked questions about employment, income, ability to meet expenses, retirement, cultural practices, First Nations language skills, and physical health.
Folk Historical Sense in Two Native American Authors
The Food Police: The White Possessive Securitization of Winnipeg Food Spaces
Food Security and Indigenous Mental Health
The Formation of Artifact Assemblages at Workshop/Habitation Sites: Models from Peace Point in Northern Alberta
The Formation of Flakes
Forty Years of Cultural Change Among the Inuit in Alaska, Canada and Greenland: Some Reflections
Foster Child
Framing Colonialism: An Analysis of Kent Monkman’s mistikôsiwak (Wooden Boat People)
Discusses two-panelled work commissioned by the Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York. One panel, entitled Welcoming the Newcomers, depicts the moment of first contact, the other, entitled Resurgence of the People, depicts contemporary struggles of Indigenous peoples.
Free and Informed Consent and Imposed Sterilizations among First Nations and Inuit Women in Quebec: Research Report
Free Trade and The Indian Nations
From Blood Feud to Jury System; The Metamorphosis of Cherokee Law from 1750 to 1840
From Speaking Ngiyampaa to Speaking English
From Sydney to Tingha: Early Days in the Aboriginal-Australian Fellowship
From the Battle in the Classroom to the Battle for the Classroom
The Frontier Indian in White Art, 1820-1876: The Development of a Myth
The Frozen Family From the Utqiagvik Site, Barrow, Alaska
Full Blood, Mixed Blood, Generic, and Ersatz: The Problem of Indian Identity
The Fur Trade and Early Capitalist Development in British Columbia
The Fur Trade and Western Canadian Society 1670-1870
A Fur Trader's Photographs: A.A. Chesterfield in the District of Ungava, 1901-4
Gabriel Dumont
Gabriel Dumont: Métis Legend
Brief video discusses the life of the Metis leader and his role in the 1885 Resistance. Duration: 7:25.
Related Material: Transcript; Teacher's Guide.
Gaining Wisdom in the Wonder of Women's Business
Garden of Relatives Coloring Book
Colouring pages based on design that features plants and the animals associated with them.
Generational Politics and American Indian Youth Movements of the 1960s and 1970s
The Genesis and Anatomy of Government Policy and Indian Reserve Agriculture on Four Agencies in Treaty Four, 1874-1897
[The Gentle Persuador: A Biography of James Gladstone, Indian Senator]
Gerald Vizenor and Harold of Orange: From Word Cinemas to Real Cinema
Gerald Vizenor and "Harold of Orange": from Word Cinemas to Real Cinema
Gerald Vizenor: Compassionate Trickster
Gerald Vizenor: Compassionate Trickster
Gerald Vizenor: Selected Bibliography
Gerald Vizenor: Selected Bibliography
German Indian Enthusiasts
English and American Studies Thesis (MA) -- Masarky University, 2022.
The Giant
Giant Fish, Giant Otters, and Dinosaurs: "Apparently Irrational Beliefs" in a Chipewyan Community
'Gii-Ikidonaaniwan' = 'It Has Been Said': Queen's University Indigenous Identity Project: Final Report
Addresses the issue of individuals at the university benefiting from fraudulent claims of Indigenous identity.