Voices of the Silenced: Missing and Murdered Indigenous Women in Canada
The Waiting Game: Exploring the Lived Experiences of First Nations Who Are Waiting for Housing to Determine Appropriate Policy and Planning Directions
Wampum, Bibles, Treaties, and American Letters: Native American and Anglo-American Communications in Early America
War, Death and What Remains in the Poetry of Joy Harjo
The Water Walker Written and Illustrated by Joanne Robertson: Teacher Guide
To accompany book about Josephine-ba Mandamim, an Ojibwe Grandmother, and her love for water; she has walked around the Great Lakes to raise awareness of the importance of protecting it for future generations.
Appropriate for use with students aged 6-9 (Grades 1-3). English text with some Ojibwe vocabulary.
"We All Stand Side by Side": An Interview With Elizabeth LaPensée
"We Are Syilx" [Part 1]
We Belong to the Land: Native Americans Experiencing and Coping with Racial Microagressions
“We Have Stuff Enough in Us to Get Better”: Healing Through Truth Telling in Contemporary Indigenous Women’s Literature
English Thesis (MA) -- St. Thomas University, 2014.
We Interrupt This Program: Indigenous Media Tactics in Canadian Culture
"We Lived It": Stories of Cultural Resilience, Dinék'ehgo Nanitiin (Diné-Based Instruction), and Navigating Between University and Tribal Institutional Review Boards
Weaving Intersectional Rhetoric: The Digital Counternarratives of Indigenous Feminist Bloggers
The Wedding of Pocahontas and John Rolfe: How to Keep the Thrill Alive After Four Hundred Years of Marriage
What Comes From Hitting Sticks
What's ya Story: The Making of a Digital Storytelling Mobile App with Aboriginal Young People
What We Learned: Two Generations Reflect on Tsimshian Education and the Day Schools
What We Talk about When We Talk about Indian
Where Did That Come From? Indigenous Activists Discuss the Creation of Canada's National Missing and Murdered Indigenous Women Inquiry
"Where I have to Learn the Ways How to Live:" Youth Resilience in a Yup'ik Village in Alaska
Where is Here?
Using their own personal reflections the author looks at Ontario Indigenous land claims and its impact into modern times.
Where the Salmon Run: The Life and Legacy of Billy Frank Jr.
[The White Earth Nation: Ratification of a Native Democratic Constitution]
The White of the Wampum: Possibilities for Indigenous-non-Indigenous Relationships in Canadian Settler Narratives (circa 2012) and Indigenous Storywork
Linguistics Thesis (PhD) -- Carleton University, 2020.
Who Are These People Anyway?
Whose Land Is It? Rethinking Sovereignty in British Columbia
The Wisdom of Thunder: Indigenous Knowledge Translation of Experiences and Responses to Depression Among Indigenous Peoples Living with HIV
Social Work Thesis (PhD) -- McMaster University, 2017.
"The Wish to Become a Red Indian": Indianthusiasm and Racial Ideologies in Germany
Women, Contemporary Aboriginal Issues, and Resistance: Tool Kit
Women Narratives: Resistance to Oppression and the Empowerment of Women in Uzbekistan
Women's Right to Food in the City: Indigenous Single Mothers Confronting Unjust Foodscapes, Poverty, and Racism in Winnipeg
Women's Work Women's Art: Nineteenth-Century Northern Athapaskan Clothing
A Woodland Creation Story: A Concise Version
Based on the Iroquois story as told by John A. Gibson in the 1890s. Done in a glossary format.
Woods Cree Stories
The World, the Text, and the Indian: Global Dimensions of Native American Literature
A World Without Fathers: Patriarchy, Colonialism, and the Male Creator in Northwest Tribal Narratives
Worldwide Indigenous Science Network: Research Library
“Woven Alike with Meaning” : Sovereignty and Form in Native North American Poetry, 1800-1910
Writing Settlement after Idle No More: Non-Indigenous Responses in Anglo-Canadian Poetry
Written as I Remember It: Teachings (ɂɘms taɂaw) from the Life of a Sliammon Elder
Yakama Rising: Indigenous Cultural Revitalization, Activism, and Healing
Yakama Rising: Indigenous Cultural Revitalization, Activism, and Healing
"You Can't Say You're Sovereign If You Can't Feed Yourself": Defining and Enacting Food Sovereignty in American Indian Community Gardening
‘You Know What You Know’: An Indigenist Methodology with Haudenosaunee Grandmothers
"You'll Probably Tell Me That Your Grandmother Was an Indian Princess": Identity, Community, and Politics in the Oral History of the Union of British Columbia Indian Chiefs, 1969-1980
"You Need to Tell That True Albert Johnson Story Like We Know it": Meanings Embedded in the Gwich'in Version of the Albert Johnson Story
Ziizibaakwadgummig: The Sugar Bush
Series of five short videos: Stories; Collecting Maple Sap; Language; Maples Trees; and Maple Sugar.
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