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Aboriginal Healing & Wellness Strategy Research Project: Repatriation of Aboriginal Families: Issues, Models and a Workplan. Final Report
Aboriginal Women and Community Development: Consistency Across Time
Adaptation in American Indian Families: Perceptions of Older Women
The Americanization of Monogamy: Mormons, Native Americans and the Nineteenth-Century Perception that Polygamy was a Threat to Democracy
The Assiniboine
Autobiographical Writing as a Healing Process: Interview with Alice Masak French
Being an Indigenous Carer
Bingo Orphans
Black Elk Lives: Conversations With the Black Elk Family
Breaking Trail: Factors That Enable Northern Aboriginal Students to Succeed in Higher Education
British Justice
The Broken Crucible of Assimilation: Forest Grove Indian School and the Origins of Off-Reservation Boarding-School Education in the West
Using selected correspondence to explore the experiences of Indigenous students at Forest Grove Indian School in Oregon. The primary sources discussed are provided at the end of the article.
A Case Study of the Social-Political Factors That Have Affected a Selected Tribal College
Challenges Facing American Indian Youth: On the Front Lines With Senator Ben Nighthorse Campbell
Clear Goals and a Loving Family Help Youth Succeed
Brief profile of sixteen year old Alika LaFontaine, recipient of the National Aboriginal Achievement Award, the Rotary Club Service Award for academics and the Sherwood Co-operative Service Award. All the awards attest to his commitment to academic achievement, career goals, and community service.
Entire issue on one pdf. To access article scroll to p.23.
Comanche Society, 1706-1850
Complementary Power: Men and Women of the Lenni Lenape
Confronting HIV and AIDS: A Personal Account
The Coos and Coquille: A Northwest Coast Historical Anthropology
Courtship and Seduction in American Indian Myths and Legends
Creating Culturally Responsive Learning Situations for Alaska Native Adults Based on Their Values
Cree Mother Loses Organ Harvest Fight
Relates how a non-Aboriginal parent's right to harvest organs and cremate an adoptive son superseded a Cree biological mother's right to bury her adult son according to First Nation spiritual and cultural beliefs.
Entire issue on one pdf. To access article scroll to p.1.