Our Right to Communicate: Getting the World to Listen
Our Stories: First Peoples in Canada
Our Stories: First Peoples in Canada
Paradoxes of Modernism and Indianness in the Southeast
Paul Boyer on the New Information Age
"The People Who Own Themselves": Recognition of Métis Identity in Canada: Report of the Standing Senate Committee on Aboriginal Peoples
Peoples and Cultures of the Circumpolar World II: Module 1: Introduction
Planning for the Next Generation: Capital Infrastructure at Colleges and Universities
Playing Indian, between Idealization and Vilification: Seems You Have to Play Indian to be Indian
"Please Eunice, Don't Be Ignorant": The White Reader as Trickster in Lee Maracle's Fiction
Discusses how Lee Maracle leads her readers to see the realities of a world that is rigid and unequally divided by using "we", "I" and "you" to flip the idea of "others".
Plural Sovereignties and Contemporary Indigenous Literature by Stuart Christie
“Poetry [Film] = Anger × Imagination”: Intermediality, the Synthesis of Poetry and Film, and Cross- Cultural Belonging in Sherman Alexie’s The Business of Fancydancing
The Politics of Development in Nunavut: Land Claims, Arctic Urbanization, and Geopolitics
The Politics of Identity: Emerging Indigeneity
Postpartum Depression Prevalence and Risk Factors among Indigenous, Non-Indigenous and Immigrant women in Canada
Powering Self-Determination: Indigenous Renewable Energy Developments in British Columbia
The Powwow Dance and My Dance with Powwows
Proceedings from the First International Conference on Urbanisation in the Arctic
A Process for Creating the Aboriginal Children's Health and Well-Being Measure (ACHWM)
Quantification of Interplaying Relationships between Wellbeing Priorities of Aboriginal Peoples in Remote Australia
Quebec First Nations Regional Health Survey - 2008: Chapter 3: Migration
Quebec First Nations Regional Health Survey - 2008: Chapter 6: Community Well-Being
The Quest of Shiman-Chu: Questioning the Absolutes of Language, Culture, and Being
Racial-Settler Capitalism: Character Building and the Accumulation of Land and Labor in the Late Nineteenth Century
Raymond Boisjoly in Conversation With Marcia Crosby
Reading Bodies, Writing Blackness: Anti-/Blackness and Nineteenth-Century Kanaka Maoli Literary Nationalism
Reaffirming Cultural Identity: A Case Study of Stó:lō Pithouse Reconstructions
Recharting the Courses of History: Mapping Concepts of Community, Archaeology, and Inuit Qaujimajatuqangit in the Canadian Territory of Nunavut
Reclaiming Indigenous Planning
Recognizing Ritual Action and Intent in Communal Mourning Features on the Southern California Coast
Reconciliation and the Quest for Pākehā Identity in Aotearoa New Zealand
The Reconstruction of Inuit Collective Identity: From Cultural to Civic The Case of Nunavut
Examines Inuit history from pre-contact to 1960s, the Nunavut negotiation process, relevant publications, geopolitical boundaries, and literature on Inuit identity.
Chapter seven from Moving Forward, Making a Difference, vol. 2, which is also vol. 4 in the Aboriginal Policy Research series.
Originally presented at the Aboriginal Policy Research Conference, 2006.
[Red Crow College Sponsored "Teach-In" with Treaty 7 Idle No More Tantoo Cardinal January 29, 2013]
[Red Crow College Sponsored "Teach-In" With Treaty 7 Idle No More Tantoo Cardinal January 30, 2013]
Red Women Rising: Indigenous Women Survivors in Vancouver’s Downtown Eastside
The Regulation of Aboriginal Political Routines, 1869-1900: Band Government as a Practice of Governance
Reimagining Indian Country: Native American Migration and Identity in Twentieth-Century Los Angeles
Religion, Land and Democracy in Canadian Indigenous-State Relations
Relocations upon Relocations: Home, Language, and Native American Women's Writings
Reporting Métis in Urban Centres on the 1996 Census
Argues that combining concepts of ethnic origin and Métis identity would provide a more complete picture of the population. Looks at statistics for Winnipeg, Edmonton, Calgary, and Vancouver.
Chapter five from Setting the Agenda for Change, vol. 1 which is also vol. 1 in the Aboriginal Policy Research series.
Originally presented at the Aboriginal Policy Research Conference, 2002.