VAW Legal Information Resource: Supporting Aboriginal Women Facing Violence
Verna Richards Interview 1
Verna Richards Interview 2
Verwoben in “Indianthusiasm”: A Uniquely German Entanglement
Victorian Aboriginal Men's Programs Literature Review
Victory through Honour: Reconciling Canadian Intellectual Property Laws and Kwakwaka’wakw Cultural Property Laws
Violence Against Indigenous Women in Canada: A Colonial Legacy or Tragedy?
Violence and Abuse in Sámi Communities
Analyzes the State's human rights obligations as found in the European Convention on Human Human Rights, the UN Convention on the Elimination of All Forms of Discrimination against Women, the Istanbul Convention, and the UN Convention on the Rights of the Child and examines the challenges that prevent Sámi victims from accessing support services and the measures implemented to provide remedies to the problem.
Violence, Compensation, and Settler Colonialism: Adjudicating Claims of Indian Residential School Abuse through the Independent Assessment Process
The Voice From North Point Douglas: Spatial Justice, Embodied Dispossession and Resistance in Winnipeg
Waakia’ligan: Community Voices on Housing at Garden Hill First Nation, Manitoba
Walking Together: Applying OCAP® to College Research in Central Alberta
Walking Together: Ontario's Long-Term Strategy to End Violence against Indigenous Women: Year Two Update--March 2018
Walter Deiter Interview
We Are All Related: Using Augmented Reality as a Learning Resource for Indigenous-Settler Relations
We Are All Treaty People
Special themed issue of Canada's History's children's magazine Kayak (September 2018). Suitable for ages 7-12.
We Are More Than Missing and Murdered: The Healing Power of Re-writing, Re-claiming and Re-presenting
We Are Not Going Anywhere
"We are the Arctic": Identities at the Arctic Winter Games 2016
"We Celebrate Our Own Funeral, the Discovery of America:" Pathos, Promise, and Constraint in Simon Pokagon's (Potawatomie) Resistance to the 1893 World's Fair
“We don’t kiss like that”: Inuit Women Respond to Music Video Representation
We Don't Live in Snow Houses Now: Reflections of Arctic Bay
We Have Stories: Five Generations of Indigenous Women in Water
We Matter, We Count: Winnipeg Street Census 2018: Final Report
We Rise Together: Achieving Pathway to Canada Target 1 through the Creation of Indigenous Protected and Conserved Areas in the Spirit and Practice of Reconciliation: The Indigenous Circle of Experts' Report and Recommendations
“We stopped sharing when we became civilized”: A Model of Colonialism as a Determinant of Indigenous Health in Canada
We've Always Been Here: Tracing Shifts in the Portrayal of Status, Agency and Mi'kmaw Women's Activism in the Micmac News, 1971-1979
"We’ve Been Researched to Death”: Exploring the Research Experiences of Urban Indigenous Peoples in Vancouver, Canada
We Were Always Here
Weaving the Present, Writing the Future: Benaway, Belcourt, and Whitehead's Queer Indigenous Imaginaries
Weaving Ways: Indigenous Ways of Knowing in Classrooms and Schools: An Introductory Guide
Welcome to Country Speeches: A Personal Perspective from a Larrakia Man
Welcome to the First Edition from Waakebiness-Bryce Institute for Indigenous Health
Wendy Red Star: Challenging Colonial Histories and Foregrounding the Impacts of Violence Against Indigenous Women
Art History Thesis (BA) -- University of Colorado, 2018.
The Wetiko Legal Principles: Cree and Anishinabek Responses to Violence and Victimization
What Can Traditional Indigenous Knowledge Teach Us about Changing Our Approach to Human Activity and Environmental Stewardship in Order to Reduce the Severity of Climate Change?
What Can We Learn from the Stanley Trial?
What is a 'Decent' House?
What Ma Lach’s Bones Tell Us: Performances of Relational Materiality in Response to Genocide
What's the Harm? Examining the Stereotyping of Indigenous Peoples in Health Systems
Education Thesis (DEd) -- Simon Fraser University, 2018.
What Would It Take?: Youth Across Canada Speak Out on Youth Homelessness Prevention
White Backlash against Indigenous Peoples in Canada
White Nationalism and Native Cultures
The White Woman’s Indian: Laura Gilpin in the American Southwest
[Whitehorse Point-in-Time Count] 2018 Report
Why Did Charlie Wenjack Die?
Why Indigenous Literatures Matter
Wild Card: Making Sense of Adoption and Indigenous Citizenship Orders in Settler Colonial Contexts
Foreword to Special Issue on Adoption and Indigenous Citizenship Orders highlights the topics, authors and social contexts to be covered in the issue.
William Bleasdell Cameron and Horse Child
Historical note: