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Aa-Wiichaautuwiihkw: Coming Together to Walk Together. Creating a Culturally Appropriate Watershed and Marine Protected Area in Paakumshumwaau (Old Factory) James Bay, Quebec ; Year 3
Aboriginal Conditions: Research as a Foundation For Public Policy
Aboriginal English: Some Grammatical Features and Their Implications
Aboriginal Horizontal Framework
Aboriginal Identity Development, Language Knowledge, and School Attrition: An Examination of Cultural Continuity
Aboriginal Languages in Canada, 1996: A Teacher's Resource
Aboriginal Languages in Canada: Trends and Perspectives on Maintenance and Revitalization
Research based on language data from 1981 to 2001 census.
Chapter eleven from Moving Forward, Making a Difference, vol. 1, which is also vol. 3 in the Aboriginal Policy Research series. Originally presented at the second annual Aboriginal Policy Research Conference, 2006.
Aboriginal Languages within Canada's Friendship Centre Areas: State, Diversity, Prospects and Implications, 2006 Census
Aboriginal Peoples and Language: National Household Survey (NHS), 2011
Aboriginal Peoples Television Network
Official website of APTN, a national TV network in Canada, where programming is dedicated to First Nations, Inuit and Metis peoples, including documentaries, news, drama, education and entertainment. Some programs are in Indigenous languages including Cree, Dene and Inuktitut with occasional use of subtitles and French.
Aboriginal Ways of Using English
Aboriginal Youth at Risk: The Role of Education, Mobility, Housing, Employment, and Language as Protective Factors for Problem and Criminal Behaviours
Algonquian Linguistic Atlas
Alive and Kicking: Areyonga Teenage Pitjantjatjara
Alive and Well: Native Theatre in Canada
Allocating Authority and Policing Competency: Indigenous Language Teacher Certification in the United States
American Indians at Risk
Anthropological Places, Digital Spaces, and Imaginary Scapes: Packaging a Digital Sámiland
The Arctic Indigenous Language Initiative: Assessment, Promotion, and Collaboration
Arctic Origin and Domestic Development of Chinook Jargon
Looks at characteristics of the population that would have found the mixed language useful and how it developed through marriages between traders and Indigenous women.
Chapter from: Language Contact in the Arctic: Northern Pidgins and Contact Languages edited by Ernst Håkon Jahr and Ingvild Broch