"The Legacy Will Be the Change": Reconciling How We Live with and Relate to Water
Looks at the Indigenous approach towards water knowledge and how this approach can be used in collaboration with Western knowledge systems for water policy making and research.
Lost and Forgotten: Sex Workers on Vancouver's Downtown Eastside
Mann Children in 1885
Manufacturing Compliance with Anti-Indigenous Racism in Canadian Hockey: The Case of Beardy's Blackhawks.
Māori Centred Social Work Practice: Evidence Brief
Marie Baldwin, Racism, and the Society of American Indians
Mary Two-Axe Earley: I Am Indian Again
Me Tomorrow: Indigenous Views on the Future
Measuring Cultural Safety in Health Systems
Minority and Indigenous Trends 2021: Focus on COVID-19
Missing and Murdered Indigenous Women and Girls in Canada: Gender, Indigeneity, and Genocide
Missing and Murdered Indigenous Women and Girls in Tiohtiá:ke/Montreal: Towards a Meaningful Collaboration
between the SPVM and Indigenous Communities
The Missing and Murdered Indigenous Women and Girls National Inquiry: Meta-genre, Genre Hybridity, and Social Change
Missing and Murdered Indigenous Women Task Force: A Report to the Minnesota Legislature
Missing and Murdered Indigenous Women: The Role of Media and Political Administrations/Campaigns in Undermining Violence against Indigenous Women and Girls in Canada
Missing or Murdered Indigenous People: Culturally Based Prevention Strategies
Mixed-blood: Indigenous-Black Identity in Colonial Canada
The Moccasin Identifier Education Kit
More Than Words: Outlining Preconditions to Collaboration Among First Nations, the Federal Government, and the Provincial Government
Looks at the work towards creating a more collaborative relationship between the different levels of government and its Indigenous populations. In particular the articles focuses on the precondition phase of the collaboration process.
“The More You Know”: Critical Historical Knowledge About Indian Residential Schools Increases Non-Indigenous Canadians' Empathy for Indigenous Peoples
Moving Forward: No Scientific Integrity without an Acknowledgment of Past Wrongs
NAGPRA's Politics of Recognition: Repatriation Struggles of a Terminated Tribe
Native American Racism in the Age of Donald Trump: Historical and Contemporary Perspectives
Ne-Iikaanigaana Toolkit 'All Our Relations': Guidance For Creating Safer Environments For Indigenous Peoples
Discusses strategies health care organizations can employ in areas of community, education, relationships, Indigenous partnership, wholistic continuum of care, self-determination and culture in order to create a inclusive environment for Indigenous patients.
Never Until Now: Indigenous & Racialized Women's Experiences Working in Yukon & Northern British Columbia Mine Camps
Research consisted of survey and semi-structured interviews using open-ended questions with 22 respondents. Study found: limited job opportunityand longevity of employment, inadequate pay scale for hours worked, uequal work expectations, limited opportunities for advancement, inadequate harm prevention, gender or race harassement/discrimination with absence of grievance mechanisms, poor environmental practices, and limited economic benefits to Indigenous people.
New Discourses on Energy Transition as an Opportunity for Reconciliation? Analyzing Indigenous and Non-Indigenous Communications in Media and Policy Documents
Examines the levels of inclusion and exclusion of Indigenous voices in regards to energy issues in Canada.
nîpawistamâsowin: We Will Stand Up [Shorter Version]
No More Stolen Sisters: Campaign Guide
No Past, No Name, No Place? Urban Sámi Invisibility and Visibility in the Past and Present
“Nothing about us, without us”: An Investigation into the Justification for Indigenous Peoples to be Involved in Every Step of Indigenous Digital Product Design
Ottawa Inuit Women’s Housing and Shelter Needs Assessment
Our Betrayed Wards: A Story of "Chicanery, Infidelity and the Prostitution of Trust"
Originally published in 1921. This version transcribed, curated and with additions. The author was the Indian Agent for the "Blood and Peigan" Indians from 1898 to 1911.
Our Health Counts Thunder Bay Factsheets
Survey conducted using Respondent-Driven Sampling resulted in 601 adult and 229 child surveys being completed. In addition to health questions respondents were asked about other topics such as culture, identity, housing, discrimination, and access to justice.
“Ours from the top to the very bottom”: Seneca Land, Colonial Development, Proto-Conservation, and Resistance in the Early American Republic
The Paths to Realizing Reconciliation: Indigenous Consultation in Jasper National Park
Using interviews from the Jasper Indigenous Forum (JIF) the authors examines the struggle for Indigenous representations into how their culture is presented.
Pekiwewin (coming home): Advancing Good Relations with Indigenous People Experiencing Homelessness
Pekiwewin (Coming Home): Clinical Guidelines for Health and Social Service Providers Working with Indigenous People Experiencing Homelessness: Executive Summary
Planning Through Land Acknowledgments
Environmental Studies Major Project Report (MES) -- York University, 2020.
Planting the Seeds: Insights for Researchers Interested in Working With Indigenous Peoples
Examines workshops created by Indigenous elders and academic researchers to improve culturally safe research practices with Indigenous populations.
Playing (the Casino) Indian: Native American Roles in Peak TV
Point-in-Time Count Toolkit: Fostering Aboriginal Partnerships and Cultural Competence During Your Point-in-Time Count
Police Services and Inuit in Nunavik (Arctic Québec): Knowing Each Other Better to Help Each Other Better
A Postcolonial Discourse Analysis of Community Stakeholders’ Perspectives on Supporting Urban Indigenous Older Adults to Age Well in Ottawa, Canada
Pow-wow with Chief Beardy (plumes on hat) and Chief Okamesis [after] N.W. Rebellion, 1885
Primary Source Learning: The Wampanoag, the Plimoth Colonists & the First Thanksgiving
Lesson plan designed for elementary students.
Related material: Teaching Guide.
A Principled Approach to Research Conducted with Inuit, Métis, and First Nations People: Promoting Engagement Inspired by the CIHR Guidelines for Health Research Involving Aboriginal People (2007-2010)
Examines the use of the Canadian Institutes of Health Research guidelines to guide the collaboration between researchers and Indigenous communities.
Protocols for Non-Indigenous Health Care Organizations Seeking to Work with Indigenous Knowledge Keepers
Guidance on creating a welcoming environment and considerations before, during and after an event.