Learning from Country
Learning from Shi-shi-etko’s Story: Indigenous Approaches for a Healthy School
Legislative Ambiguity and Ontological Hierarchy in US Sacred Land Law
Lehae-La-Rona: Epistemological Interrogations to Broaden our Conception of Environment and Sustainability
Listening to the Stories of American Indians at Oregon State Hospital
Living Tradition: The Kwakwaka'wakw Potlatch on the Northwest Coast
Living With Animals: Ojibwe Spirit Powers
Louis Prince: A Mediator of the Higher Powers
Originally published in the Winnipeg Tribune on July 28, 1954 under the title "Powers Defy White Man: Witch Doctor’s Rites ‘Raise’ Lost Bodies". Article is about Louis Prince, a healer and clairvoyant from Manitoba.
Mãori Customary Law: A Relational Approach to Justice
Māori Entrepreneurship: A Māori Perspective
Māori Men, Relationships, and Everyday Practices: Towards Broadening Domestic Violence Research
Māori Social Workers: Experiences within Social Service Organisations
Mapurbe: Spiritual Decolonization and the Word in the Chilean Mierdópolis
Mark of the Métis: Traditional Knowledge and Stories of the Métis Peoples of Northeastern Alberta
Memory Eternal: Tlingit Culture and Russian Orthodox Christianity Through Two Centuries
A Metissage: Learning in Nature with Indigenous Ways - Environmental Studies, Culture and 'Play' - Lessons That Meet PLO's
[Michif Language Resources: An Annotated Bibliography]
Mind's Eye, Stories from Whapmagoostui
More Than a Façade: The Kenekuk Religion Revisited
More Than Just Bones: Ethics and Research on Human Remains
Moving Aboriginal Health Forward: Discarding Canada's Legal Barriers
Multicultural Issues in the Clinical Interview and Diagnostic Process
Musqueam Celebrates 'Huge Win' to Protect Ancient Burial Site
Comments on a protest to halt construction on a condominium project.
Page 1 of insert entitled Raven's Eye: Special Section Providing Aboriginal News from BC & Yukon.
Entire issue on one pdf. Scroll down to access article.
Mythologies of an [Un]dead Indian
Native American Educational Leadership in the Pacific Northwest
Native Homelands along the Lewis & Clark Trail
Members of Blackfoot, Mandan, Hidatsa, Shoshone, Salish, Nez Perce, Yakama, and Chinookan nations speak about their history and culture. Duration: 35:50.
Related material: Teacher Guide.
Native Life
[Native Storytelling Festival: The Real Story of the Quileute Wolves]
The Nature of Empires and the Empires of Nature: Indigenous Peoples and the Great Lakes Environment
The Navajo Code Talkers of World War II: The First Twenty-Nine
Never Alone: The Art and the People of the Story
A New Anthropology of Neo-Indians
New Light on Black Elk and The Sacred Pipe
Nga Reanga: Youth Development Māori Styles
[Niigaanwewidam James Sinclair CKP 2014: Keynote Speaker]
"No One Here is Torn": Religious Symbolism in David Treuer's Little and The Hiawatha
North American Indigenous Curators' Constructions of Indigenous Knowledge: Applying the Sociology of Knowledge Approach to Discourse
The Oceanic Imagination: Canadian and Australian Contributions to a Trans-Indigenous Methodology
Off Native Ground: Europe in Contemporary American Indian Poetry
Okwire’shon:’a, the First Storytellers: Recovering Landed Consciousness in Readings of Trees & Texts
English Thesis (Ph.D.)--McMaster University, 2017. Refers to the works Power by Linda Hogan, Monkey Beach by Eden Robinson, and Truth and Bright Water by Thomas King.