Questions Need to be Answered, Says Family Member of Pickton's Last Victim
Reflects on the life and personality of Mona Wilson, a victim of serial killer Robert Pickton, and the naming of a corporation after Wilson's First Nation's name, Running Bear.
Entire issue on one pdf. To access article scroll to p.8.
Questions of the Spirit: Bloodlines in Louise Erdrich's Chippewa Landscape
Race and the Atlanta Cotton States Exposition of 1895
Race, Gender and Colonialism: Public Life Among the Six Nations of Grand River, 1899-1939
Race, Gender, and Homicide: Comparrisons Between Aboriginals and Other Canadians
Racial Disparities in Health Status: A Comparison of the Morbidity Among American Indian and U.S. Adults With Diabetes
Racial Folly: A Twentieth-Century Aboriginal Family
Racial Oppression in Sherman Alexie's Reservation Blues
The Racialization of Dine (Navajo) Youth in Education
Racing Solidarity, Remaking Labour: Labour Renewal From A Decolonizing And Anti-Racism Perspective
Racism, Discrimination and Health Services to Aboriginal People in South West Queensland
Racism in the Electronic Age: Role of Online Forums in Expressing Racial Attitudes About American Indians
Racism, Nationalism, and Nostalgia in Cowboy Art
A Radiant Curve: Poems and Stories
Radiocarbon Dating as a Probabilistic Technique: The Childers Site and Late Woodland Occupation in the Ohio Valley
Radiocarbon Dating of Fremont Anthropomorphic Rock Art in Glen Canyon, South-Central Utah
Rainy River Lives: Stories Told by Maggie Wilson
Raising the Standards of Aboriginal Health Care
Rampart House
Historic site located near the mouth of Boundary Creek (Shanàghan K’òhnjik) and right next to the boundary between the United States and Canada.
Raven Feather and the Tsimshian: A Look at The Mountain Goats of Temlaham illustrated by Elizabeth Cleaver
Raven Imagery in Northwest Coast Indian Art
Rayna Green, Joy Harjo, and Wendy Rose: The Necessity of Native American Storytelling in Combating Oppression and Injustice
Re-conceptualizing Anishinaabe Mino-Bimaadiziwin (the Good Life) as Research Methodology: A Spirit-centered Way in Anishinaabe Research
Re-Conceptualizing Research: An Indigenous Perspective
(Re)covering Oka: Alanis Obomsawin's Representation of the Crisis at Oka
Re-indigenizing Curriculum: An Eco-hermeneutic Approach to Learning
Re-matriating Territorial Acknowledgement: A Métis Women’s Perspective
A personal reflection on providing a Métis perspective to land acknowledgments.
Re-reading Photographs through the Lens of Defamiliarizing the Aboriginal
Re-Searching Métis Identity: My Métis Family Story
Re-Visions: An Early Version of The Surrounded
Re-visualizing a History: First Nations, Children and Costuming - Exhibition
Reaching Agreement for an Aboriginal E-health Research Agenda: The Aboriginal Telehealth Knowledge Circle Consensus Method
Reader's Theatre: Grade 2 Social Studies: The Signing of Treaty Six
Four scenes, each taking place at a different location (Ottawa, Fort Garry, outside Fort Carleton and Fort Carleton) and involving individuals significant to the negotiations such as Governor Alexander Morris, James McKay, Chief Ahatahkakoop, Chief Mistawasis, Poundmaker and Peter Erasmus. Includes discussion questions and short biographies.