Documenting Ethnic Cleansing in North America: Creating Unseen Tears
Does Climate Change Redefine Sovereignty?
Dog Ear Cafe: How the Mt Theo Program Beat the Curse of Petrol Sniffing
Donald Marshall
Down in a Valley, Up on a Ridge: Applying a Case Repertoire to Advanced Telecommunications and Rural Developments
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
Economic Aspects of the Indigenous Experience in Canada
Editorial
Editorial
Editors' Introduction: Lessons From Experience [Volume 7, Number 1]
Educating Medical Students’ “Hearts and Minds”: A Humanities-Informed Cultural Immersion Program in Indigenous Experiential Community Learning
Examines the First Nations Community Education Program as a collaborative effort to address Indigenous health inequalities in Canada.
Educational Empowerment of Native American Students: A Tribally Controlled College Leads the Way
Embodied Landscapes: Native Americans, English Colonists, and the Creation of Early American Communities
Empowerment of American Indians and the Effect on Political Participation
Enacting Relationality: Remembering the Land in Land Acknowledgments
Encouraging Cultural Awareness in Engineering Students
Engagement in First Nations Police Governance: A National Examination of Police Boards
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
Epistemic Injustice and Indigenous Women: Toward Centering Indigeneity in Social Work
Equality Among Women
Discussion on the power of women and the inequality of paternalism, racism, sexism, and the materialistic society. Attached is a short poem titled The Red in Winter by Emma LaRocque. Entire issue on one pdf.
Scroll down to page 133 to read article.
Ethical and Equitable Engagement Synthesis Report: A Collection of Inuit Rules, Guidelines, Protocols, and Values for the Engagement of Inuit Communities and Indigenous Knowledge from across Inuit Nunaat
Ethics and the Reburial Controversy
The Ethics of Reconciling: Learning From Canada's Truth and Reconciliation Commission
Ethnicity and Gender in the Global Periphery: A Comparison of Basotho and Navajo Women
Evaluation of the Effects of the Quebec First Nations and Inuit Faculties of Medicine Program (QFNIFMP): Final Report 2019-2020
"Evil Men Who Add to Our Difficulties": Shawnees, Quakers, and William Wells, 1807-1808
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
Expert Witnesses’ and Lawyers’ Perspectives on the Use of Archaeological Data as Evidence in Aboriginal Rights and Title Litigation
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
The Fatality of Bias
Federal Sexual Crimes
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.