We Are All Related: Using Augmented Reality as a Learning Resource for Indigenous-Settler Relations
We Are All Treaty People
Special themed issue of Canada's History's children's magazine Kayak (September 2018). Suitable for ages 7-12.
"We Are Among the Poor, the Powerless, the Inexperienced and the Inarticulate": Clyde Warrior's Campaign for a "Greater Indian America"
We Are More Than Missing and Murdered: The Healing Power of Re-writing, Re-claiming and Re-presenting
We Are Not Going Anywhere
"We are the Arctic": Identities at the Arctic Winter Games 2016
"We Celebrate Our Own Funeral, the Discovery of America:" Pathos, Promise, and Constraint in Simon Pokagon's (Potawatomie) Resistance to the 1893 World's Fair
"We Do Not Talk About Our History Here": The Department of Indian Affairs, Musqueam-Settler Relations, and Memory in a Vancouver Neighbourhood
We Rise Together: Achieving Pathway to Canada Target 1 through the Creation of Indigenous Protected and Conserved Areas in the Spirit and Practice of Reconciliation: The Indigenous Circle of Experts' Report and Recommendations
"We’ve Been Researched to Death”: Exploring the Research Experiences of Urban Indigenous Peoples in Vancouver, Canada
We Were Always Here
"We Were Recruited From The Warriors of Many Famous Nations," Cultural Preservation: U.S. Army Western Apache Scouts, 1871-1947
Weaving Ways: Indigenous Ways of Knowing in Classrooms and Schools: An Introductory Guide
Web of Stories: Conversations with Cherie Dimaline
Welcome to Country Speeches: A Personal Perspective from a Larrakia Man
The West and Beyond: New Perspectives on an Imagined Region
"What a Women Can Do With an Auto": American Women in the Early Automotive Era
What Can Traditional Indigenous Knowledge Teach Us about Changing Our Approach to Human Activity and Environmental Stewardship in Order to Reduce the Severity of Climate Change?
What Can We Learn from the Stanley Trial?
What Do Indigenous Education Policy Frameworks Reveal about Commitments to Reconciliation in Canadian School Systems?
What is the Degree of Mātauranga Māori Expressed Through Measures Of Ethnicity?
What it Means to be an Indian
What Ma Lach’s Bones Tell Us: Performances of Relational Materiality in Response to Genocide
What Other Canadian Kids Have: The Fight for a New School in Attawapiskat
What's the Harm? Examining the Stereotyping of Indigenous Peoples in Health Systems
Education Thesis (DEd) -- Simon Fraser University, 2018.
What Sort of Indian Will Show Me the Way?: Colonization, Mediation, and Interpretation in the Sun Dance Contact Zone
What the White "Squaws" Want From Black Hawk: Gendering the Fan-Celebrity Relationship
What to the American Indian is the Fourth of July? Moving Beyond Abolitionist Rhetoric in William Apess's Eulogy on King Philip
When the Other Is Me: Native Resistance Discourse, 1850-1990
White Backlash against Indigenous Peoples in Canada
White Man's Club: Schools, Race, and the Struggle of Indian Acculturation
White Man's Club: Schools, Race, and the Struggle of Indian Acculturation
White Mother to a Dark Race: Settler Colonialism, Maternalism, and the Removal of Indigenous Children in the American West and Australia, 1880-1940
White Picket Fences: Whiteness, Urban Aboriginal Women and Housing Market Discrimination in Kelowna, British Columbia
The Whiteman's Aborigine
Why Are We Settling? Indigenous Cultural Safety Education for Counsellors in Ontario
Kinesiology Thesis (PhD) -- Queen's University, 2020.
Why Didn't You Listen: White Noise and Black History
Why Indigenous Literatures Matter
Why Is Adoption Like a First Nations’ Feast?: Lax Kw’alaam Indigenizing Adoptions in Child Welfare
Wicihitowin: Aboriginal Social Work in Canada
Wild Card: Making Sense of Adoption and Indigenous Citizenship Orders in Settler Colonial Contexts
Foreword to Special Issue on Adoption and Indigenous Citizenship Orders highlights the topics, authors and social contexts to be covered in the issue.
[Will Truth Bring Reconciliation?]
William Apess and Sherman Alexie: Imagining Indianness in (Non)Fiction
William McLennan, 4 October 1948-3 July 2020. Curator Emeritus, Museum of Anthropology at UBC, Vancouver
Windspeaker News Briefs
Outlines three stories: an agreement with Brokenhead Ojibway Nation's chief and Manitoba's minister of conservation to protect petroform sites, an outcry for a public inquiry into the murders of convicted killer Robert Pickton and a request for a ban on the bulldozing of important Native sites without the consent of Ontario First Nations people.
Entire issue on one pdf. To access article scroll to p.9.