'Something More Than An Indian': Carlos Montezuma and Wassaja, the Dual Identity of an Assimilationist and Indian Rights Activist
The Soul of Unity: The Quarterly Journal of the Society of American Indians, 1913-1915
Standing Up with Ga’axsta’las: Jane Constance Cook and the Politics of Memory, Church, and Custom
Standoff at Oka
Staying Segeju: Young Activist Researchers from an Indigenous East African People Fight Forced Integration Campaigns among Swahili Coast Communities
Story People: Stó:lō-State Relations and Indigenous Literacies in British Columbia, 1864–1874
[Strong Hearts Native Lands Grassy Narrows Blockade]
Strong Hearts, Native Lands: The Cultural and Political Landscape of Anishinaabe Anti-Clearcutting Activism
Struggle Continues for Jacobs Despite Personal Accomplishments
Brief profile of Beverley Jacobs, recipient of the Governor General's Award, who, as president of the Native Women’s Association of Canada campaigns to ensure Aboriginal women receive the same respect as non-Aboriginal women.
Entire issue on one pdf. To access article scroll to p.10.
Struggling For Autonomy: The Dynamics of the Indigenous Women's Movement in Mexico
Supreme Court of Canada Holds Aboriginal Rights Cannot Be Used to Justify Road Blockades
Taiaiake Alfred on His Indigenous Manifesto
Teaching as Activism: Equity Meets Environmentalism
Telling Stories About Conflict: Symbolic Politics and the Ipperwash Land Transfer Agreement
Thinking Through Anti-Racism and Indigenity in Canada
[Thomas King: The Inconvenient Indian]
Three Strikes But Not Out: Judicial Losses and Women's Political Activism Ahead of the Charter
[To Sir Wilfrid Laurier, Premier of the Dominion of Canada: From the Chiefs of the Shuswap, Okanagan and Couteau Tribes of British Columbia, Presented at Kamloops, B.C. August 25, 1910]
Text of letter protesting the misappropriation of land, failure to create treaties, and the policies of the B.C. government. Site also includes information on laws and customs, historical and political context, and timeline from 1763 to 2009.
"to take positive and effective action": Rupert Costo and the California Based American Indian Historical Society
Toward Sustainable Self-Determination: Rethinking the Contemporary Indigenous-Rights Discourse
Transforming and Grappling with Concepts of Activism and Feminism with Indigenous Women Artists
Transnational Progressivism: African Americans, Native Americans and the Universal Races Congress of 1911
Trust and Survival: AWOL Hunkpapa Indian Family Prisoners of War at Fort Sully, 1890-1891
Unlearning Colonialism: Storytelling and the Accord
Unsettling the Contemporary: Critical Indigeneity and Resources in Art
We Are Survivors!
“What We’ve Said Can be Proven in the Ground”: Stó:lō Sovereignty and Historical Narratives at Xá:ytem, 1990–2006
William Apess, the “Lost Tribes,” and Indigenous Survivance
William Cooper Gentle Warrior: Standing Up For Australian Aborigines and Persecuted Jews
[William Singer III at Kainai High School Speaking For Treaty 7 Idle No More Group January 30, 2013]
The Winter of Our Discontent
Comments on media coverage of Idle No More events, hunger strike regarding horrid conditions in Attawapiskat, police abuse towards First Nation people in Thunder Bay and more.
Entire issue on one pdf. To access article scroll to p.12.