"We Are Not Beggars": Political Genesis of the Native Brotherhood, 1931-1951 Theses Author/Creator Peter Parker Description History Thesis (M.A.)--Simon Fraser University, 1992. Login or Register to create bookmarks.
[We Pioneered; Stoney Creek Woman: Sai'k'uz Ts'eke - The Story of Mary John] Book Reviews Author/Creator Bob Galois Native Studies Review, vol. 6, no. 1, 1990, pp. 165-170 Description Book review of two books:We Pioneered by Arthur & Cyril Shelford; Stoney Creek Woman: Sai'k'uz Ts'eke - The Story of Mary John by Bridget Moran. Login or Register to create bookmarks.
What's Next? Three Ways to Add Money to Indian Health and Bigger Fights Ahead Articles » General Author/Creator Mark Trahant Indigenous Policy Journal, vol. 28, no. 1, Summer, 2017, p. [?] Description Reprinted from Trahant Reports, March 23, 2017. Login or Register to create bookmarks.
'What We Heard': Report to Employment and Social Development Canada on the Feedback Received Regarding the E-Books Author/Creator Virgina Gluska Login or Register to create bookmarks.
When is an Indian not an Indian? The "Friends of the Indian" and the Problem of Indian Identity Articles » General Author/Creator Alexandra Harmon Journal of Ethnic Studies, vol. 18, no. 2, Summer, 1990, pp. 95-123 Description Looks at the campaign to assimilate Native Americans in 1889 in order to eliminate the characteristics which set them apart. Login or Register to create bookmarks.
Who Was Henry Standing Bear? Remembering Lakota Activism From the Early Twentieth Century Articles » Scholarly, peer reviewed Author/Creator Kiara M. Vigil Great Plains Quarterly, vol. 37, no. 3, Summer, 2017, pp. 157-182 Description Overview of the Crazy Horse Memorial and Standing Bear's connection to it. Login or Register to create bookmarks.
Whose North? Political Change, Political Development, and Self-Government in the Northwest Territories E-Books Author/Creator Mark O. Dickerson Login or Register to create bookmarks.
Working Out Their Own Salvation: The Allotment of Land in Severalty and the Turtle Mountain Chippewa Band, 1870-1920 Articles » Scholarly, peer reviewed Author/Creator Gregory S. Camp American Indian Culture and Research Journal, vol. 14, no. 2, 1990, pp. 19-38 Description Chronicles the effects of government policy, which resulted in the relocation of members of the Chippewa Band to as far away as South Dakota and Montana. Login or Register to create bookmarks.