Search
Jean Baptiste Racette Interview
Jean (John) Paul Ouellette Interview
General account of Mr. Ouellette's life and Métis
history.Jim Panamick 1
Jim Panamick 2
John George Gardiner Interview
A Journey of Doing Research “In a Good Way”: Partnership, Ceremony, and Reflections Contributing to the Care and Wellbeing of Indigenous Women Living with HIV in Canada
Looks at the importance of building relationships when conducting research with Indigenous women living with HIV.
Julia Petatagoose
Justice and Safety for Urban Indigenous Children and Youth in Canada
Ka Whati Te Tai = A Generation Disrupted: The Challenges and Opportunities for Māori in the New Work Order Post COVID-19
Kahnawake Schools Diabetes Prevention Project
Kate Assinewe
Kimihia te Aronga-a-Hine: The Māori Midwifery Workforce in Aotearoa: Workforce Report 2020
Kokums to the Iskwêsisisak: COVID-19 and Urban Métis Girls and Young Women
Labour Market Impacts of COVID-19 on Indigenous People: March to August 2020
The Landscape in Montana: Missing Indigenous Persons
Lawrence Delisle Interview
Lawrence Joseph Pritchard Interview #1
Lawrence Joseph Pritchard Interview #2
Lawrence Joseph Pritchard Interview #3
LB154 Report: Prevalence of Missing Native American Women and Children in Nebraska; Barriers to Reporting and Investigating; and Opportunities for Partnerships
"The Legacy Will Be the Change": Reconciling How We Live with and Relate to Water
Looks at the Indigenous approach towards water knowledge and how this approach can be used in collaboration with Western knowledge systems for water policy making and research.
Leonard Frank Pambrun Interview
Letsemot, “Togetherness”: Exploring How Connection to Land, Water, and Territory Influences Health and Wellness with First Nations Knowledge Keepers and Youth in the Fraser Salish Region of British Columbia
Examines the connection between land and health in the Stó:lō culture and how this connection can be used to guide Indigenous health policies.
Life When Renting for Older Māori
A Literature Review Prepared for Native Women's Association of Canada: A Highlight of the Pathways (and Barriers) to Stable, Culturally Appropriate Housing Experienced by Indigenous 2SLGBTQQIA
Living in Nunavik: Considering the Housing Production System Through Complexity
Explores the difference between a building versus a dwelling to find a more sustainable solution to Inuit housing issues.
Living in the South, Caring in the North: Exploring Inuit Women’s Care Responsibilities
Examines the migration of Inuit women to urban centers and how their roles as caregivers influenced their decision to relocate.
Local Know-How and Self-Construction in the Tundra: A Reading of the Salluit Fjord Cabins
Examines the cultural and architectural significance of Nunavik's cabins and how they could be used to address the Inuit communities housing issues.
The Long Journey Home, 96 Miles Up the Porcupine River / Ch’oodeenjik, Yukon
The Long Road Back: Maria Campbell
Lost and Forgotten: Sex Workers on Vancouver's Downtown Eastside
Major Concerns of Anglo Student Teachers Serving in Native American Communities
Making Indigenous Women and Girls Visible in the Implementation of the UN Framework for the Immediate Socio-Economic Response to COVID-19: Accessing Funds through the Multi-Partner Trust Fund
"Many Tender Ties": Women in Fur-Trade Society, 1670-1870
Mapping the Landscape: Indigenous Skills Training and Jobs in Canada
Mapping the Past: An Atlas of Victorian Clans, 1835-1904. Part 1
Margaret Charles Interview
Maria Chona: An Independent Women in Traditional Culture
Marie Baldwin, Racism, and the Society of American Indians
The Mass Incarceration of Indigenous Women in Canada: A Colonial Tactic of Control and Assimilation
Maurice Boyer Interview
Measuring Building Quality of First Nation Owned Housing in British Columbia
Le Messianisme de Louis Riel
Methanol From The School
[Métis Community & Kinship]
Designed for Grades 4-9.