Lubicon Lake Nation: Spirit of Resistance
MAI Te Kupenga: Supporting Māori and Indigenous Doctoral Scholars within Higher Education
Sarah Jane Tiakiwai
Making the Buffalo Commons New Again: Rangeland Restoration and Bison Reintroduction in the Montana Highline
Masi Methodology: Centring Pacific Women’s Voices in Research
Men, Masculinity, and the Indian Act
"Métis, c'est ma nation. 'Your own people,' comme on dit": Life Histories from Eva, Evelyn, Priscilla and Jennifer Richard
Minogondaagan: The Good Voice
Miyo Nêhiyâwiwin (Beautiful Creeness): Ceremonial Aesthetics and Nêhiyaw Legal Pedagogy
Moving Towards an Indigenous Research Process: A Reflexive Approach to Empirical Work with First Nations Communities in Canada
My Reflection of that Time
NADOC and the National Aborigines Day in Sydney, 1957–67
Narratives of Hope: Enacting Indigenous Language and Cultural Reclamation across Geographies and Positionalities
A Nation of Families: Traditional Indigenous Kinship, the Foundation for Cheyenne Sovereignty
National Identity and Belonging in Arctic Siberia: An Ethnography of Evenkis and Dolgans at Khantaiskoe Ozero in the Taimyr Autonomous District
Native Narratives: The Representation of Native Americans in Public Broadcasting
Looks at radio and television coverage of key events or issues in both non-Native American-produced and Native American-created programs found in the American Archive of Public Broadcasting collection. Divided into five sections: (Mis)Representations of Native Americans; Termination, Relocation, and Restoration; The American Indian Movement; Native Americans in Contemporary News Media; and Visual Sovereignty: Native-Created Public Media.
The Native Tribes of Alaska: An Address Before the Section of Anthropology of the American Association for the Advancement of Science, at Ann Arbor, August, 1885
Natives and Reserve Establishment in Nineteenth Century British Columbia
Not a One-Size-Fits-All Approach: Building Tribal Infrastructure for Research through CRCAIH
Not Jimmie Durham's Cherokee
Notes on Becoming a Comrade: Indigenous Women, Leadership, and Movement(s) for Decolonization
Author uses her own experiences as non-Indigenous woman of color to explore the challenges in becoming an ally with Indigenous communities fight in their fight for decolonization.
Nuuk, Greenland: Site, Situation, and “The Law of the Primate City”
Object (To) Sanctity: The Politics of the Object
On the Importance of Language: Reclaiming Indigenous Place Names at Wasagamack ᐘᕊᑲᒪᕁ First Nation, Manitoba, Canada
On the Way to Decolonization in a Settler Colony: Re-introducing Black Feminist Identity Politics
Our Health Counts Toronto: An Inclusive Community-Driven Health Survey for Indigenous Peoples in Toronto: Draft
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
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".