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Australian Race Relations 1788-1993
Australian Reconciliation Barometer 2010: Comparing the Attitudes of Indigenous People and Australians Overall
Authentic Alaska: Voices of Its Native Writers
Authentic Inuit Art: Creation and Exclusion in the Canadian North
Authenticity on the Line: Women Workers, Native "Scabs," and the Multi-Ethnic Politics of Identity in a Left-Led Strike in Cold War Canada
The Autocracy of Love and the Legitimacy of Empire: Intimacy, Power and Scandal in Nineteenth-Century Metlakahtlah
An Awakening of the Métis Spirit Within: Understanding My Struggle with Identity Within the Educational System
Awards for Excellence in Workplace Literacy, Large Business Winner, 2003: Mining for Performance Excellence at BHP Billiton Diamonds Inc.
Balancing Cultural Tourism
Balancing Values: Re-Viewing the 1882 Bombardment of Angoon Alaska From a Tlingit Religious and Cultural Perspective
Baptism and Humanity: Native American-Jesuit Relationships in New France
Barefoot Books Encourage Kids to Embrace Reading
Barriers to Inclusion: Access to Social Services for Marginalized Families in Saskatchewan
Battle Camp to Boralga: A Local Study of Colonial War on Cape York Peninsula, 1873-1894
The Bear Facts
Humourous animated short involves a ill-equipped European "discovering" the Inuit homeland and promptly planting flags everywhere as a sign of ownership and an Inuit hunter's response. Accompanying material: The Bear Facts: Lesson Plan.
Duration: 3:58.
The Bear Facts: Lesson Plan
Guide to accompany film, The Bear Facts. Target audience Grades one to three in the subject areas of History, Social Sciences, First Nations and Humanities.
"Because I Happen to Be a Native Clergyman": The Impact of Race, Ethnicity, Status, and Gender on Native Agents of the Church Missionary Society in the Nineteenth Century Canadian North-West
Becoming First Americans: Explaining a Polybian-Indian Movement in the American Southeast
Becoming Métis: The Relationship Between the Sense of Métis Self and Cultural Stories
Before the Redskins Were the Redskins: The Use of Native American Team Names in the Formative Era of American Sports, 1857-1933
The Beginning and the End: Lewis and Clark among the Upper Missouri River People
Behind the Blockades
'Behold the Tears': Photography as Colonial Witness
Being Allies: Exploring Indigeneity and Difference in Decolonized Anti-oppressive Spaces
Being Cherokee in a White World: The Ethnic Persistence of a Post-Removal American Indian Enclave
Best Practices: Does it Mean the Same Thing in the Aboriginal Community as it Does in the Health Authorities When it Comes to Diabetes Care?
Betraying the Victims: The 'Stolen Generations' Report
Between the Sands and a Hard Place?: Aboriginal Peoples and the Oil Sands
Between Two Cultures: Discourse Transitions From Home To School For Indigenous Children
Bibliography on the Real History of the U.S. and the American Indian [and a Selection of Native American Literature for Adults]
The Binary of Meaning: Native/American Indian Media in the 21st Century
Bingo, Blackjack, and One-Armed Bandits in the Northwoods: A Sociology of American Indian Gaming in the United States
A Biologists’ Perspective on Amalgamating Traditional
Environmental Knowledge and Resource Management
'Black is Beautiful', and Indigenous: Aboriginality and Authorship in Australian Popular Music
Black Lines, White Spaces: Towards Decoding a Rhetoric of Indian Identity
Blood Politics, Racial Classification, and Cherokee National Identity: The Trials and Tribulations of the Cherokee Freedmen
Blowing Smoke Out Your....
Discusses a questionable comment made on the radio by host T. J. Conner regarding the Olympic Torch visit stopping in Curve Lake to "buy smokes".
Entire issue on one pdf. To access article scroll to p.12.
Boarding School Abuses, Human Rights, and Reparations
Book Review
Book Review
Book Review
Book Review
Book Review
Border Crossings: Thomas King's Cultural Inversions
Border Crossings: Thomas King's Cultural Inversions
Borrowing Power: Racial Metaphors and Pseudo-Indian Mascots
Boye Ladd: A Visit from a Friend
Powwow dancer, Boye Ladd, relates traditional teachings on various topics relating to First Nations culture, including information about the sacred drum, respect for other people and groups, and the right to wear an eagle feather.
Entire issue on one pdf. To access article scroll to p.29.