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Developing Tautai Lavea‘i, a Breast Cancer Patient Nativation Program in American Samoa
Deviant Constructions: How Governments Preserve Colonial Narratives of Addictions and Poor Mental Health to Intervene into the Lives of Indigenous Children and Families in Canada
Diagnosis as a Naming Ceremony: Caution Warranted in Use of the DSM-IV with Canadian Aboriginal Peoples
Dialogue As A Method For Evolving Mātauranga Māori: Perspectives On The Use Of Embryos In Research
Discursive and Mediatic Battles in Thomas King's Green Grass, Running Water
Disproportionate Representation and First Nations Child Welfare in Canada
Divergent Models of Diabetes Among American Indian Elders
Divided We Fall: Cherokee Sovereignty and the Cost of Factionalism, 1827-1906
Do American Indian Mascots = American Indian People? Examining Implicit Bias towards American Indian People and American Indian Mascots
Do No Further Harm: Becoming a White Ally in Child Welfare Work With Aboriginal Children, Families, and Communities
Documenting Ethnic Cleansing in North America: Creating Unseen Tears
Documents: Introduction
Introduction and two archival items on social and economic conditions of Aboriginal people. The first report is on the socio-economic conditions that contributed to the spread of tuberculosis, and the economic measures needed to be taken to improve the lives of the Swampy Cree Indians. The second report is an account of the socio-economic conditions of Aboriginal people and recommendations for improving their health status.
Does Climate Change Redefine Sovereignty?
Dog Ear Cafe: How the Mt Theo Program Beat the Curse of Petrol Sniffing
Down in a Valley, Up on a Ridge: Applying a Case Repertoire to Advanced Telecommunications and Rural Developments
Drawing on Inuit
Dreaming With the Ancestors: Black Seminole Women in Texas and Mexico
Due Diligence, or How I lost Ten Pounds
The Duty to Consult: New Relationships With Aboriginal Peoples
Dying Under the Living Sky: A Case Study of Interracial Violence in Southeast Saskatchewan
Editorial
Editorial
Editors' Introduction: Lessons From Experience [Volume 7, Number 1]
Educational Empowerment of Native American Students: A Tribally Controlled College Leads the Way
Elias Cornelius Boudinot, "The Indian Orator and Lecturer"
Embodied Landscapes: Native Americans, English Colonists, and the Creation of Early American Communities
Employment of Navajos on the Navajo Nation in Arizona as Influenced by Instruction in Vocational Agriculture
Empowerment of American Indians and the Effect on Political Participation
Encouraging Cultural Awareness in Engineering Students
Entwined Histories: Exploring Native-Newcomer Relations via The Native Voice
Entwined Histories: The Creation of the Maisie Hurley Collection of Native Art
Environmental Racism on Indigenous Lands and Territories
[An Error in Judgement: The Politics of Medical Care in an Indian/White Community]
The Ethics of Reconciling: Learning From Canada's Truth and Reconciliation Commission
Exhibiting Dual(ling) Narratives of Canadian Art at the Art Gallery of Ontario
Exiled, Executed, Exalted: Louis Riel, Homo Sacer and the Production of Canadian Sovereignty
An Explanation of Key Factors That Prevent First Nations Mothers Participating in Public Schools
Explorations of Culture in Session: Stories of White Therapists Working With Native American Clients
Exploring the Impact of Ongoing Colonial Violence on Aboriginal Students in the Postsecondary Classroom
Extermination of the Joyas: Gendercide in Spanish California
Fahrenheit 2010: Or Burn Baby Burn
Reflects on Florida's Pastor Terry Jones' burning of the Koran and Canadian history of First Nations treatment by the Church-run residential schools.
Entire issue on one pdf. To access article scroll to p.12.
Family and Nation: Cherokee Orphan Care, 1835-1903
Fantastic Dreaming: The Archaeology of an Aboriginal Mission
Filmmaker, Lawyer, Indian Chief: The Negotiation of Identity in an Indigenous Film Festival
Final Report of the Honorable Jean-Jacques Croteau Retired Judge of the Superior Court Regarding the Allegations Concerning the Slaughter of Inuit Sled Dogs in Nunavik (1950-1970)
Finding a Place for Race at the Policy Table:Broadening the Indigenous Education Discourse in Canada
Scholarly, peer reviewed paper argues the idea that emphasis on "culture" will improve educational outcomes with urban Aboriginal youth is not working and that the issue of race is more important in the urban context.