Health Status Report of Aboriginal People in Ontario
Homelessness across Alaska, the Canadian North and Greenland: A Review of the Literature on a Developing Social Phenomenon in the Circumpolar North
Hospitalization for Ambulatory Care Sensitive Conditions among Urban Métis Adults
How Can the Health Community Foster and Promote the Health of Aboriginal Children and Youth?
Identity Formation and Cultural Resilience in Aboriginal Communities
Comments on communities that appear to be at similar levels of risk or adversity but display large differences in outcomes.
Chapter from Promoting Resilient Development in Young People Receiving Care: International Perspectives on Theory, Research, Practice & Policy edited by R. J. Flynn, P. Dudding, J. Barber.
Improving Access to Specialists in Remote Communities: A Cross-sectional Study and Cost Analysis of the Use of eConsult in Nunavut
Improving the Oral Health of Alaska Natives
Incorporating Diverse Understandings of Indigenous Identity: Toward a Broader Definition of Cultural Safety for Urban Indigenous Youth
Indigenous Community Development Projects: Early Learnings
Indigenous Cultures and Mental Health Counselling: Four Directions for Integration with Counselling Psychology
The Indigenous Experience of Work in a Health Research Organisation: Are There Wider Inferences?
Indigenous Peoples & Poverty: An International Perspective
Indigenous Suicide: The Turamarama Declaration
Indigenous Wholistic Theory for Health: Enhancing Traditional-Based Indigenous Health Services in Vancouver
Indigenous Women as Newspaper Representations: Violence and Action in 1960s Vancouver
Information Sharing
Inside Out: An Indigenous Community Radio Response to Incarceration in Western Australia
Is the Internet a Useful Resource for Indigenous Women Living in Remote Communities in Canada, Australia and New Zealand to Access Health Resources?
Lessons From the Tiwi Islands: The Need for Radical Improvement in Remote Aboriginal Communities
Literature Borealis: Circumpolar Themes in the Work of Nils-Aslak Valkeapää
Living Tensions of Co-Creating a Wellness Program and Narrative Inquiry alongside Urban Aboriginal Youth
Long Term Care Needs of Alaska Native Elders
Loving Indianess: Native Women's Storytelling as Survivance
Māori Women's Perspectives of Leadership and Wellbeing
Marree Aboriginal School...Taking Health Promotion on the Road
Methods to Help Communities Investigate Environmental Health Issues
[Module 9]: The Well-being of Northern Peoples and Communities
Native Women, Violence, Substance Abuse and HIV Risk
[Natuashish: Struggling with the Hangovers of Old Davis Inlet]
Needs Assessment Guide for Métis Communities
New Year: New Priorities, New Executive for NRHA
Niiwin Wendaanimak Four Winds Wellness Program Evaluation Report
Program designed for homeless and under-housed Indigenous peoples living in the downtown mid-west Toronto area. Evaluation consisted of environmental scan, developing a client profile, key informant interviews and focus groups.
Nobody Here Will Harm You: Mass Medical Evacuation from the Eastern Arctic, 1950-1965
Northern Indicators 2004
Nunavut and Canada Live Births by Birth Weight, 2000 to 2014
Nursing Practice in Rural and Remote Canada II: Registered Nurse National Survey Report
Nutrition North Canada: Real Change is Yet to Come
Of the Heart: Scoping Review of Indigenous Youth Suicide and Prevention
Offenders with Fetal Alcohol Syndrome
An Offering: Lakota Elders Contributions to the Future of Food Security
[Operation Water Spirit Thematic Units]: Grade Two: Unit Scope and Introduction
Opioid Use in Pregnancy and Parenting: An Indigenous-Based Collaborative Framework for Northwestern Ontario
Oral Disease Prevalence Among HIV-Positive American Indians in an Urban Clinic
Orphans within Our Family: Intergenerational Trauma and Homeless Aboriginal Men
Our Health Counts: Urban Indigenous Health Database Project: Community Report: Inuit Adults, City of Ottawa
Our Identities as Civic Power
Reports on the results of the Generation Indigenous (Gen-I) Online Roundtable Survey of Native American youth between the ages 18-24. Respondents were asked about their three top priorities, what they are doing to tackle their challenges, and some of the ways they are partnering with their community to build resilience.