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1982 Elders Conference 3/5
1982 Elders Conference 5/5
Accord or Discord: Returning to Oral Traditions?
Assessing Cultural Sensitivity of Breast Cancer Information for Older Aboriginal Women
Comments on recommendations for development of breast cancer resources for Canadian Aboriginal women.
Being Lakota: Identity and Tradition on Pine Ridge Reservation
Book Reviews
Can Museums Promote Community Healing?: A Healing Museum Model for Indigenous Communities
Casper Solomon Interview #2
Charlie Chief 2 Interview
Congress Examines Role of Arts Within Aboriginal Community
Overview of Gordon Tootoosis and Maria Campbell's speeches at the 2007 Congress of the Humanities and Social Sciences. The two speakers talked about the importance of theatre in Aboriginal culture and the hurdles they faced in their careers.
Entire issue on one pdf. To access article scroll to p.25.
Cree Elders Workshop 2
Cree Elders Workshop 3
Decolonization Matters: Remember This! Dakota Decolonization and the Eli Taylor Narratives by Waziyatawin Angela Wilson and In the Footsteps of Our Ancestors edited by Waziyatawin Angela Wilson
Eliza Kneller Interview #1
Eliza Kneller Interview #2B
Eliza Kneller Interview #3
Elmira McLeod Interview
Elmira McLeod Interview #3
Elmira McLeod Interview #4
Ensuring Knowledge Transmission in the Aboriginal Child Welfare Field
Francis Harper Interview
Honoring the WORD: Classroom Instructors Find That Students Respond Best to Oral Tradition
Inculcating Indigenous Knowledge and Spirituality: A Siksika (Blackfoot) Theory of Learning
Indigenous Illustration: Native American Artists and Nineteenth-Century US Print Culture
Interview with Mrs. Cecile Many Guns (Grassy Water) and Mrs. Annie Buffalo (Bear Child)
Jimmy and Charlie Chief Interview
Jimmy Chief Interview
Joe Belly Interview
Joe Highway: King of the North
Joe Sylvester Interview
Consists of an interview with Joe Sylvester where he gives an account of Indian medicine; legends concerning migration of Algonquin Indians; the role of elders; of the deterioration of reservation conditions following World War II; the religious significance of the number "four"; views on welfare and its role in disrupting traditional Indian values; and a legend about the origin of the drum.