Ts'úu isgyáan Sgahláang = Yellow and Red Cedar
Science unit also teaches the Haida language. Intended for Grades K-2.
Related Material: Teacher Resources.
Two Articles
The Two-Eyed Seeing Garden
Two Paths One Direction: Parks Canada and Aboriginal Peoples Working Together
Two Sides of the Coin: Rights and Duties: The Interface Between Environmental Law and Saami Law Based on a Comparison with Aoteoaroa/New Zealand and Canada
Understanding Diversity and Interculturalism Between Aboriginal Peoples and Newcomers in Winnipeg
Understanding Respiratory Conditions Among Ontario's Aboriginal Population
[Unikkaaqatigiit (Putting a Human Face on Climate Change): Perspectives from Inuit in Canada]
Unlearning the Colonial Cultures of Planning
Unsettling: Land Dispossession and Enduring Inequity for the Q'eqchi' Maya in the Guatemalan and Belizean Frontier Colonization Process
Uploading Selves: Inuit Digital Storytelling on YouTube
The Use of Joint Ventures to Accomplish Aboriginal Economic Development: Two Examples From British Columbia
Use of Media Technologies by Native American Teens and Young Adults: Evaluating Their Utility for Designing Culturally-Appropriate Sexual Health Interventions Targeting Native Youth in the Pacific Northwest
Using E-Learning to Build Governance Capacity in the Yekooche First Nation: A Case Study of the Yekooche Learning Centre
The Value of a Polar Bear: Evaluating the Role of a Multiple-Use Resource in the Nunavut Mixed Economy
Variations Saisonnières et Échange-don de Nourriture Chez les Inuit du Nunavik
Varieties of Medical Treatment and Hierarchies of Resort in Johan Turi's Sámi Deavsttat
The Victor Diamond Mine Environmental Assessment and the Mushkegowuk Territory First Nations: Critical Systems Thinking and Social Justice
Volume 5A: Aboriginal Engagement: Enbridge Northern Gateway Project
Volume 5B: Aboriginal Traditional Knowledge: Enbridge Northern Gateway Project
Vulnerability of Aboriginal Health Systems in Canada to Climate Change
Vulnerability to Climate Change in Igloolik, Nunavut: What We Can Learn From The Past and Present
Waban-Aki: People From Where the Sun Rises
Waiting for Coyote's Call: An Eco-Memoir From the Missouri River Bluff
Walnut Creek Village: A Ninth-Century Hohokam-Anasazi Settlement in the Mountains of Central Arizona
Wapos Bay: The Elements
Wapos Bay: The Treasure of the Sierra Metis
Wapos Bay: Time Management
Wapos Bay: Ways of the Quiet
"A War Without Bombs": The Government's Role in Damming and Flooding of Lac des Mille Lacs First Nation
Waste Disposal in First Nations Communities: The Issues and Steps Toward the Future
Water and Indigenous Peoples
Water Stories from Around the World
See: The Hero Twins and the Swallower of Clouds (North America), p. 10.
Koluscap and the Water Monster (North America), p. 53.
Tiddalik the Frog (Australia), p. 60
Watershed Planning in Clayoquot Sound, Volume 1: Principles and Process
Watershed Planning in Clayoquot Sound, Volume 5: Hesquiaht Watershed Plan
Wave Eaters: Native Watercraft in Canada
Ways of Knowing and Understanding: Towards the Convergence of Traditional and Scientific Knowledge of Climate Change in the Canadian North
"Ways To Help And Ways To Hinder": Climate, Health, And Food Security In Alaska
'We've Also Become Quite Good Friends': Environmentalists, Social Networks and Social Comparison in British Columbia, Canada
Welcome News as Mike Holmes Weighs in to Housing Issue
Describes the partnering of celebrity contractor Mike Holmes with First Nations communities to build new schools and homes using green technology.
Entire issue on one pdf. To access article scroll to p.11.
Wet Prairie: An Environmental History of Wetlands, Flooding and Drainage in Agricultural Manitoba, 1810-1980
"What a Women Can Do With an Auto": American Women in the Early Automotive Era
What is the Degree of Mātauranga Māori Expressed Through Measures Of Ethnicity?
When Consultation Becomes a Checkbox, What's the Fracking Point?: Colonial Constraints on Social Learning Processes in Northeast BC and the Fort Nelson First Nation's New Approach to Resource Governance
Where Are We Going?
Willie McLeod Interview
Windspeaker News Briefs
Outlines six stories including: flooding and a mudslide in the community of Tsawataineuk First Nation, tropical storm Earl uncovers First Nations artifacts in New Brunswick, questions about gun registry violating treaty rights and more.
Entire issue on one pdf. To access article scroll to p.9.