“Whitman’s Song Sung the Navajo Way”
Who Are These People Anyway?
Who Cares About the Facts?
Who Defines Success: An Analysis of Competing Models of Education for American Indian and Alaskan Native Students
Who Gets to Tell the Stories? Carlisle Indian School: Imagining a Place of Memory Through Descendant Voices
Examines boarding school through the lenses of the student's descendants recollections of their families experiences. Through these means the stories will continued to be told once there are no more living alumni.
Who is Indigenous? 'Peoplehood' and Ethnonationalist Approaches to Rearticulating Indigenous Identity
Who Is Research Serving? A Systematic Realist Review of Circumpolar Environment-Related Indigenous Health Literature
Who Supports Urban American Indian Students in Public Community Colleges?
Who Was Henry Standing Bear? Remembering Lakota Activism From the Early Twentieth Century
"Whoever Makes War Upon the Rees Will Be Considered Making War Upon the 'Great Father'" Sahnish Military Service on the Northern Great Plains, 1865-1881
A “Whole-Community” Approach for Sustainable Digital Infrastructure in Remote and Northern First Nations
Whose Bones Are They?
Whose Land is It Anyway? A Manual for Decolonization
Whose Story Is It, Anyway? Or ... Power and Difference in The Book of Jessica: Implications for Theories of Collaboration
Whose War Was It?: African American Heritage Claims and the Second Seminole War
Whose Water Is It Anyway? Indigenous Water Sovereignty in Canada: An Indigenous Resurgence Analysis of the Case of Halalt First Nation v British Columbia
Why a Living Wage Matters in the North
Why Aboriginal Self-Government?
Why Indigenous Literatures Matter
Why Run? Utah Candidate Cites Standing Rock as 'Awakening' #Nativevote18
Why Treaties Matter: Self-Government in the Dakota and Ojibwe Nations: Educator Guide for Grades 6-12
For use with the virtual exhibition Why Treaties Matter.
Wicubami: Honoring Alexis Nakota Sioux Ish?awimin through Kinship, Language, Spirit, and Research
Wife, Mother, Provider, Defender, God: Women in Lakota Winter Counts
An historical perspective on gender in relation to waniyetu wowakapi (winter counts) or hekta yawap. reveals evidence of women's roles; author suggests further historical research.
Wild Card: Making Sense of Adoption and Indigenous Citizenship Orders in Settler Colonial Contexts
Foreword to Special Issue on Adoption and Indigenous Citizenship Orders highlights the topics, authors and social contexts to be covered in the issue.
Will the Charter Burn Down the Longhouse?: How the Charter of Rights and Freedoms May Affect a Separate Criminal Justice System Based upon Mohawk Traditions
“William Apess Was Born Here”: Marking William Apess on the Geographical and Cultural Map
Windigo Ways: Eating and Excess in Louise Erdrich's The Antelope Wife
Winds of Change: A Strategy For Health Policy Research and Analysis
Winds of Change: The International Response to Persistent Organic Pollutants in the Canadian Arctic
A Winter's Research and Invention: Reverend James Evan's Exploration of Indigenous Language and the Development of Syllabics, 1838-1839
The Wisdom of Thunder: Indigenous Knowledge Translation of Experiences and Responses to Depression Among Indigenous Peoples Living with HIV
Social Work Thesis (PhD) -- McMaster University, 2017.
Wise Practices in Crime Prevention Programs: Implemented for and by Aboriginal Communities in BC
"The Wish to Become a Red Indian": Indianthusiasm and Racil Ideologies in German
With an End in Sight: Sympathetic Portrayals of "Vanishing" Sámi Life in the Works of Karl Nickula and Andreas Alariesto
"Without Destroying Ourselves": American Indian Intellectual Activism for Higher Education, 1915-1978
Wolf Lake: The Importance of Métis Connection to Land and Place
Native Studies Thesis (M.A.)--University of Alberta, 2017.
Woman of the House: Gender, Architecture, and Ideology in Dorset Prehistory
The Woman's Lodge: Constructing Gender on the Nineteenth-Century Pacific Northwest Plateau
The Wombat to Kaptn Koori: Aboriginal Representation in Comic Books and Capes
Women and the Criminal Justice System
Women and the White Man's God: Gender and Race in the Canadian Mission Field
Women in Alaska Constructing the Recovered Self: A Narrative Approach to Understanding Long-Term Recovery From Alcohol Dependence and/or Abuse
The Women's Circle Comes Full Circle
Women's Class Strategies as Activism in Native Community Building in Toronto, 1950-1975
Women's Right to Food in the City: Indigenous Single Mothers Confronting Unjust Foodscapes, Poverty, and Racism in Winnipeg
Women's Transformative Texts from the Southwestern Ecotone
Women's Use of Indigenous Knowledge for Environmental Security and Sustainable Development in Southwest Nigeria
A Woodland Creation Story: A Concise Version
Based on the Iroquois story as told by John A. Gibson in the 1890s. Done in a glossary format.