Research is Ceremony: Indigenous Research Methods
Research, Redskins, and Reality
Residency Programs Grapple with new Indigenous Cultural Safety Training Requirement
Resource Extraction and Aboriginal Communities in Northern Canada: Cultural Considerations
Resources for Animation Theme Bundle 2: Comprehending the Learning Spirit/Identity
Resurgence and Reconciliation: Indigenous-Settler Relations and Earth Teachings
Rethinking Environmental Science Education from Indigenous Knowledge Perspectives: An Experience with a Dene First Nation Community
Rethinking Historical Trauma: Narratives of Resilience
Revitalising Memory in Honour of Traditional Maseko Ngoni Governance
Revitalization Strategies in Gaspar Pedro González’s A Mayan Life
Role Models: An Anishinaabe-kwe Perspective
Roles of Indigenous Conflict Resolution Mechanisms for Maintaining Social Solidarity and Strengthening Communities in Alefa District, North West of Ethiopia
The Sacred Formulas of the Cherokees
Salvation From Empire: The Roots of Anishinabe Christianity in Upper Canada Canada, 1650-1840
Science in the Changing North
Seal Blood, Inuit Blood, and Diet: A Biocultural Model of Physiology and Cultural Identity
Seals, Selfies, and the Settler State: Indigenous Motherhood and Gendered Violence in Canada
Section Four Editorial: Graduate Education
Section One Editorial: Indigenous Methodologies
Section Three Editorial: Indigenizing Practices
Section Two Editorial: Disciplinary Perspectives and Experiences
The Seed Runner
Self-determination and Data Control Vital to Indigenous Health Research
Sharing Our Success: Promising Practices in Aboriginal Education - Proceedings of a National Conference Winnipeg, November 23-24th, 2007
Silence and Articulating: Lived Histories of the Trout Lake Anishinawbe
Scrutinizes the conduct of some contemporary archaeologists as they work within traditional territories of Canada's First Nations.
The Silent Monologue: The Voice Within the Space
The Social Economy of Canada's Aboriginal North
Socio-Cultural Impacts Of Aboriginal Cultural Industries: A Discussion Paper
Sometimes Hunting Can Seem Like a Business: Polar Bear Sport Hunting in Nunavut
[Speech Given by Priscilla Settee at the Community Economic Development International Meeting Held in May 2008 in Saskatoon]
Explains the Cree concept of wakohtowin, the betterment of all human relations. Presented at Waves of Change, 2008 National Community Economic Development International (CED) Conference held May 21-24 in Saskatoon, Saskatchewan.
State of Knowledge on Environmental Health Issues for First Nations
Stepping Up Traditional Knowledge and Technologies for Higher Women Employment and Income: A Case of Women Milk Producers in Arumeru and Hai Districts in Tanzania
Stories of Resurfacing: The University and Aboriginal Knowledge
Story Gathering With The Urban Aboriginal Community Kitchen Garden Project
"Strange Things Happen to Non-Christian People": Human-Animal Transformation among the Iñupiat of Arctic Alaska
Students Design Project with Traditional Knowledge
Three recent teaching graduates of NORTEP advocate Aboriginal knowledge be added to the curriculum in Saskatchewan schools, focusing mainly on science.
Entire issue on one pdf. To access article scroll to p.30.
Substitution and Continuity in Southern Chukotka Traditional Rituals: A Case Study from Meinypilgyno Village, 2016–2017
Sympathy for the Devil: Devil Sickness and Lore among the Tohono O'odham
Systems, Self, and Sovereignty: Non-Indigenous Practitioners Negotiate Whiteness in Aboriginal Partnerships
Taking Culture to Court: Anthropology, Expert Witnesses and Aboriginal Sense of Place in the Interior Plateau of British Columbia
Sociology and Anthropology Thesis (M.A.)--Simon Fraser University, 2008.
Tapaiitam: Human Modifications of the Coast as Adaptations to Environmental Change, Wemindji, Eastern James Bay
Tatanga Ishtima hinkna Įyá Waká: Sleeping Buffalo and Medicine Rock and Assiniboine Dislocation and Persistence
Teacher Guide for High School for Use with the Educational DVD Contemporary Voices along the Lewis & Clark Trail
Film explores Tribal members' perspectives on traditional knowledge, history, the impact of early contact and westward expansion, the importance of language, and cultural continuity.