Indigenous Early Learning and Care in the City of Edmonton: Articulating the Experiences, Perspectives and Needs of Indigenous Parents and Caregivers
Recommendations developed as a result of feedback gathered in six Talking Circles composed of both Indigenous and non-Indigenous participants.
Indigenous Genocidal Tracings: Slavery, Transracial Adoption, and the Indian Child Welfare Act
Indigenous History: A Bibliography
Indigenous Knowledge, Land, History and Health: The Construction of Diabetes on the White Mountain Apache Indian Reservation
Indigenous Rhetorics and Kinship: Towards a Rhetoric of Relational Word Bundles
Indigenous Settlers: Your Métis Genealogy Online
Inherit My Heaven: Kalaallit Gender Relations
Integrating Aboriginal Philosophy into Canadian Home Economics Education: Applying Yatta Kanu's Five Layers of Integration
Intimate Partner Violence in the Canadian Territorial North: Perspectives From a Literature Review and a Media Watch
Into the Photo Box: An Alternative Way of Approaching the Aboriginal Family
Introduction: A Holistic Approach to Indigenous Peoples’ Rights to Cultural Heritage
Introduction: Special Issue on Indigenous Early Parenthood
Introduction: We are Survivors: The Persistence of Life and Hope in Aboriginal Marriage, Family and Kinship Practices
Joe Sylvester Interview
Consists of an interview with Joe Sylvester where he gives an account of Indian medicine; legends concerning migration of Algonquin Indians; the role of elders; of the deterioration of reservation conditions following World War II; the religious significance of the number "four"; views on welfare and its role in disrupting traditional Indian values; and a legend about the origin of the drum.
Kahneepotaytayo, Big Bear's Head Dancer
Kanohi ki te kanohi - A Thing of the Past? An Examination of Māori Use of Social Networking Sites and the Implications for Māori Culture and Society
Kaupapa Māori Responses to Violence Suffered by Wāhine Māori
Discusses challenges faced by Māori agencies which deliver programs and services to women who have been subjected to intimate partner violence. Based on literature review and interviews with 15 providers from 19 organisations.
Keeoukaywin: The Visiting Way—Fostering an Indigenous Research Methodology
Kikiskisin Ná: Do You Remember? Utilizing Indigenous Methodologies to Understand the Experiences of Mixed-Blood Indigenous Peoples in Identity Re-Membering
Kinship, Family, and Exchange in a Labrador Inuit Community
Kupai Omasker: Incorporating Traditional Adoption Practices into Australia's Family Law System
Ladies, Livestock, Land and Lucre: Women's Networks and Social Status on the Western Navajo Reservation
Land Claims [Part Two]
Letting Go of Perfect: One Qallunaat Teacher's Journey of Positionality Using Narrative Inquiry in Nunavik
Life Is Harder Here: The Case of the Urban Navajo Woman
Life Support in High Age: Northern Norway 1865-1900
[Marlyn Bennett, Director of Research and Coordinating Editor of First Nations Child and Family Review Journal. Part I]
[Marlyn Bennett, Director of Research and Coordinating Editor of First Nations Child and Family Review Journal. Part II]
The Mental Health of Indigenous Peoples. Part 2
The Mental Health of Single Parents in Canada: Do Gender and Geography Matter?
Mentoring Programs for Indigenous Youth at Risk
Mitákuye Owás’ (All My Relatives): Dakota Wiconi (Way of Life) and Wicozani Waste (Well-Being)
Discusses basic tenants of Dakota spiritual traditions. Chapter ten from Learning, Technology, and Traditions, which is vol. 6 in the Aboriginal Policy Research series. Originally presented at the third annual Aboriginal Policy Research Conference, 2009.