Métis Post-Secondary Education Systems: Literature Review
Métis Training to Employment: Client Labour Market Self-Sufficiency Study
Métisness in Western Workplaces - Identity and Conflict
Integrated Studies Project (M.A.)--Athabasca University, 2007.
Please Note: Must be viewed in Firefox browser.
The Michigan Civil Rights Initiative: How Could It Impact Michigan Indian People?
Mind the Gender Gap: Policy Paper
Mining and Communities in Northern Canada: History, Politics and Memory
Mining and Indigenous Peoples: Case Studies
Mining Economies: Inuit Business Development and Employment in the Eastern Subarctic
Mining Industry Human Resources Guide for Aboriginal Communities
Mining Information Kit for Aboriginal Communities
Minority and Indigenous Trends 2021: Focus on COVID-19
Mishchet aen kishkayhtamihk nawut ki wiichiihtonaan: Bridging the Aboriginal Education Gap in Saskatchewan
Missing Persons and Social Exclusion
Mitho-Pimachesowin (Earning a Good Living): Training Indigenous Youth for Readiness in a Blended Economy + Mitho-Pimachesowin: Oskayak Takisinwahamacik Atoskewina Ta Isi Pimachesocik
Examines the use of Indigenous knowledge in the training and education of Indigenous youth to prepare them for the job market.
Miziwe Biik Aboriginal Employment and Training
Mobile Miners: Work, Home, and Hazards in the Yukon's Mining Industry
A Model for the Development of Entrepreneurship on First Nation Indian Reserves
Modern North: People, Politics and the Rejection of Colonialism
Modern Pathways and Evolving Definitions: Reframing "Aboriginal School Drop-out" in a Northern Canada Context
Modernity at Work: Wage Labor, Unemployment, and the Moral Economy of Work in a Canadian Inuit Community
Mohawk First Nations: Successes and Challenges of Small Business Owners
Mohawk Indian Tribe Lesson Plan "Sky Walkers"
Lesson plan about the Mohawk men who worked the high steel in New York City. For use with The Mohawks Who Built Manhattan by Renee Valois.
Related video High Steel.
Moose Factory: Heritage Planning in a Northern Community
The Moral Dilemma of High Stakes Gambling in Native Communities
More Than Wind: Evaluating Renewable Energy Opportunities for First Nations in Nova Scotia and New Brunswick
The Most Promising Practices in the Field of Employment and Training among First Nations and Inuit
Identifies examples of best practices in the areas of vocational training and skills acquisition, partnerships, and research and capacity building, and makes three recommendations.
Motivating Learners in Northern Communities
The Mount Druitt Support Program
Moving Low-Income People in Winnipeg's Inner City Into Good Jobs: Evidence on What Works Best
Multiple Jeopardy: A Socio-economic Comparison of Men and Women among the Indian, Metis and Inuit Peoples of Canada
Muscogee (Creek) Women's Perceptions of Work
"My Chance Has Come at Last!": The Weston Hospital, the Women's Christian Temperance Union, and Indian Nurses in Canada, 1917-1929
My Grandfather's Knocking Sticks: Ojibwe Family Life and Labor on the Reservation
My Training as a Health Worker
Myths and Misconceptions Training Modules: Meeting the Needs of Employers and First Nations, Métis, and Aboriginal Peoples Seeking Employment
Integrated Studies Project (M.A.)--Athabasca University, 2010.
Please Note: Must be viewed in Firefox browser.
Myths of Diversity: Canadian Environmentalists Don't Want to Talk About Racism--But too Often that Means the Uncritical Acceptance of Popular Diversity Myths
Naming Our Reality: Exploring Racism in Employment
The Nanisivik Legacy in Arctic Bay: A Socio-Economic Impact Study
Narrowing the Gap: The Difference That Public Sector Wages Make
A Nation in Distress: The Political Economy of Urban Aboriginal Poverty
National Aboriginal Health Strategy Working Party
National Aboriginal Tourism Research Project 2015: Economic Impact of Aboriginal Tourism in Canada
National Aboriginal Youth Strategy: December 2, 1999
National Competency Standards for Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Health Workers
National Conference on Indian and Northern Education Saskatoon 1967
Theme of the Conference was "We Listen, They Speak" and featured speakers were Inuit, First Nations and Metis.