"The Legacy Will Be the Change": Reconciling How We Live with and Relate to Water
Looks at the Indigenous approach towards water knowledge and how this approach can be used in collaboration with Western knowledge systems for water policy making and research.
The Legal Fiction of the Lake Matchimanitou Indian School
Lights, Camera
Like a Loaded Weapon: The Rehnquist Court, Indian Rights, and the History of Racism in America
Lines and Criss-crossings: Hyperlinks in Australian Indigenous Narratives
“Lives, Breathes, and Thrives”: Can American Indian Students With Disabilities Access Tribal College Websites?
Looks at the inaccessibility of tribal college websites and support available for Indigenous students with disabilities.
Lost and Forgotten: Sex Workers on Vancouver's Downtown Eastside
The Making of Who We Are, Now Showing at the NMAI Lelawi Theater
Māori Instagram: The Social Media Lifeworlds and Decolonising Practices of Rangatahi Māori
The Media, Aboriginal People and Common Sense
Media Matters: Visual Representations of Aboriginal Australia
Medicines at Standing Rock: Stories of Native Healing through Survivance
Milestones
Miss Indian America: Regulatory Gazes and the Politics of Affiliation
Missing and Murdered Indigenous Women: The Role of Media and Political Administrations/Campaigns in Undermining Violence against Indigenous Women and Girls in Canada
Missing: Where Are First Nations in National Media?
Moccasin Flats: A Landmark in Canadian Television and Canadian Identity
Module 3: Media, Arts, and Literature
Module 6: Media, Arts, and Literature
Module 9: Sami Media, Arts, and Literature
A Museum of the Indian, Not for the Indian
The Nation Says Goodbye to a Great Man
Article commemorating the life and accomplishments of Harold Cardinal, author, teacher, lawyer and leader who died June 3, 2005 at the age of 60.
Entire issue on one pdf. To access article scroll to p.22.
The National Museum of the American Indian: Sharing the Gift
Native American Barbie: The Marketing of Euro-American Desires
Discusses commodification of Native American culture in mass toy manufacture, by analyzing packaging material and accompanying text of nine Native American Barbies produced between 1981 and 2003.
Joint issue with: Indigenous Studies Today Issue 1, Spring 2006.
The Native American Digital Divide: A Preliminary Investigation of an Undergraduate Population in South Dakota
Native American Images as Sports Teams Mascots: From Chief Wahoo to Chief Illiniwek
Native American Picture Books of Change: The Art of Historic Children's Editions
Native Elder Spent Life Working For Her People
New Cinema from Winnipeg Streets: Noam Gonick's Stryker
The New Inuktitut Magazine Wants You!
News Discourse about Aboriginal Self-Governance in 1990s British Columbia
The Next Chapter of Indigenous Representation in Video Games: A New Crop of Games Teaches Language and Culture
nîpawistamâsowin: We Will Stand Up [Shorter Version]
Now Is the Time
Reviews Haida filmmaker Christopher Auchter short film Now Is the Time. The films acts as a sequel to the 1970 National Film Board of Canada short film This Was the Time documenting the raising of the first totem pole on Haida Gwaii. To view article scroll down to page 130.
Of Their Own Making: Aboriginal Print Media in Alberta
Of Voyages, Milestones, Pipedreams - and Barbie!
Oskate Wicasa (One Who Performs)
Oyate Resource List
Planning Through Land Acknowledgments
Environmental Studies Major Project Report (MES) -- York University, 2020.