Our Stories: First Peoples in Canada
Out-of-Province Hunting For Indians Ruled Legal
Outsourcing Reconciliation: The Government of Canada's #IndigenousReads Campaign and the Appropriation of Indigenous Intellectual Labor
Over-qualification in the Workforce: Do Indigenous Women and Men Benefit Equally from High Levels of Education?
Overdose Response Project Knowledge Translation Report
Overincarceration of Indigenous People: A Health Crisis
Overrepresentation of Indigenous People in the Canadian Criminal Justice System: Causes and Responses
Oviloo Tunnillie: Life & Work
P.A. Judge Upholds Indian Right To Hunt For Food In Wildlife Units
Pacific Salmon in the Rapidly Changing Arctic: Exploring Local Knowledge and Emerging Fisheries in Utqiaġvik and Nuiqsut, Alaska
Paddling Together for Culturally Safe Emergency Care for Elders
Addresses the reluctance of Nuu-chah-nulth elders to seek health care through a two day workshop between the Nuu-chah-nulth people and BC health care providers to brainstorm recommendations to improve emergency care.
Palliative Care for First Nations People in British Columbia
Nursing Thesis (MSN)--University of British Columbia (Okanagan), 2019.
[Papers and Correspondence in Connection with Half-breed Claims and Other Matters Relating to the North-West Territories]
Papers Relating to the North-West Mounted Police and Fort Walsh
Paquin / Pocha: The Origins of a Family in the Canadian Fur Trade, 1634-1896
Parade at Regina
Paradise Gained, Lost, and Regained: Pulse Migration and the Inuit Archaeology of the Quebec Lower North Shore
[Parenting After Separation for Indigenous Families: Full Course Transcript]
Past, Present and Future: Photographic Presence in New Mexico
The Patent and the Indians: The Problem of Jurisdiction in Seventeenth-Century New England
Paternal Involvement in a First Nations Community in Canada: The Effects of Perceived Positive Father Relationships on Adolescent Adjustment
Psychology Thesis (PhD) -- McGill University, 2019.
Paternalism to Partnership: The Administration of Indian Affairs, 1786–2021
Biographical sketch of each department head from 1786 to 2021, including their political philosophy.
A Path towards Economic Reconciliation That Benefits All Canadians: A Submission to the Senate Standing Committee on Aboriginal Peoples
The Pathfinders: Women Leaders in the the Tribal College Movement
Pathways in a Forest: Indigenous Guidance on Prevention-Based Child Welfare
Pathways in a Forest: Indigenous Guidance on Prevention-Based Child Welfare
Pathways into Homelessness: Indigenous Peoples, Youth, and Seniors
Brief literature review which examines system failures and structural, individual, and relational factors.
Pathways to the International Market for Indigenous Screen Content: Success Stories, Lessons Learned from Selected Jurisdictions and a Strategy for Growth
Patrick Burke
Patrick Giroux Interview
Paul Boyer on the New Information Age
Paved Trails: Crip Poetics as an Approach Towards Decolonizing Accessibility
A People and a Nation : New Directions in Contemporary Métis Studies
People from Everywhere: Metis Identity, Kinship and Mobility 1600s-1800s
History Thesis (PhD) -- University of Wisconsin, 2021.
People's Report: First Nations and Diabetes in Ontario
Perceptions of Indigenous Tourism in Manitoba
Statistics based on survey of 800 Manitobans conducted between July 22 and August 3, 2021.
Perspective: A Haunting Spectre No More: The Canadian Indigenous Condition
Argues that the Canadian Indigenous condition is not related to colonialism rather it is based on an European socioeconomic structure.
Phillip Isadore Interview
Philomene Gladue Interview
Photo Vignette – T’łisalagi’ lakw School, ‘Yalis (Alert Bay), BC, early days
Photo Vignette – Whale Watching, Salish Style
Photographs of Lieutenant R. Lyndhurst Wadmore - 1885, [1910?].
Historical note:
Robinson Lyndhurst Wadmore, who was born in England in 1855, entered the Canadian forces as a lieutenant in 1883 and served with the Royal Canadian Regiment during the Northwest Resistance of 1885. Wadmore became a colonel in 1910. He died in Victoria, BC, in 1915.Photographs of North West Canada Medal of Lieutenant R. Lyndhurst Wadmore - 1885.
Historical note:
Robinson Lyndhurst Wadmore, who was born in England in 1855, entered the Canadian forces as a lieutenant in 1883 and served with the Royal Canadian Regiment during the Northwest Resistance of 1885. Wadmore became a colonel in 1910. He died in Victoria, BC, in 1915.