First National Indigenous Male Health Convention Ross River Conference
First Nations / Aboriginal Research Projects of the Sustainable Forest Management Network
First Nations and Inuit Regional Health Survey
First Nations and Metis Curriculum Units - Series II
First Nations Art: An Introduction to Contemporary Native Artists in Canada
First Nations Bank of Canada: Interview with Mr. Keith Martell, Chair of the Board of Directors
First Nations Career/Life Planning Model: Guidelines for Practitioners
First Nations Economic Development: The Meadow Lake Tribal Council
First Nations Education: Sharing of Knowledge
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 at the Stone Weir: Part 1
Fishing at the Stone Weir: Part 2
Fishing with Grandma: By Susan Avingaq and Maren Vsetula, Illustrated by Charlene Chua: Educator's Resource
Suitable for primary grades.
Fishy Business: The N'amgis and the BC Salmon Industry
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 festival activities
The Food Police: The White Possessive Securitization of Winnipeg Food Spaces
Food Security and Indigenous Mental Health
The Forgotten Circle: A Sociolinguistic Study of English in Alaska
Fort Carlton / A Saskatchewan Historic Site - Pamphlet. - 1967.
Historical note:
Fort Carlton was a Hudson's Bay Company fur trade post from 1810 until 1885. As a Company post it primarily dealt in provisions, namely pemmican and buffalo robes although other furs were traded as well.Fort Pitt Historic Park - Pamphlet.. - 1967.
Historical note:
The Fossil Forest on Alex Heiberg Island
Foster Care Service Delivery Within the Native Community: The Importance of an Aboriginal Framework and the Capacity for Community Change
The Foundation and the Early Years of the Moravian Mission in Labrador, 1752-1805
Fragments That Rune Up the Shores: Pushing the Bear, Coyote Aesthetics, and Recovered History
A Framework For Cooperation: January, 1999
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.
Francis Black Interview
Frank G. Speck's Contributions to the Understanding of Mi'kmaq Land Use, Leadership, and Land Management
Free and Informed Consent and Imposed Sterilizations among First Nations and Inuit Women in Quebec: Research Report
From Boarding Schools to the Multicultural Classroom: The Intercultural Politics of Education, Assimilation, and American Indians
From Enemy to Mascot: The Deculturation of Indian Mascots in Sports Culture
From "Half-blood" to "Mixedblood": Cogewea and the "Discourse of Indian Blood"
From Here to Modernity: Montage, Media, and the Composition of Theater
From la Belle Sauvage to the Nobel Savage: The Deculturalization of Indian Mascots in American Culture
Looks at the contemporary use of Indian mascots.