Healing Words
Healing Words
The Health of Indigenous Peoples: Depends on Genetics, Politics, and Socioeconomic Factors
Hearing about the Realities of Intimate Partner Violence in the Northwest Territories from Frontline Service Providers: Final Report
The Heart of Lightness: Hollywood's Wild West Show Revisited
Heritage: The Manitoba Experience
High Rate of Simkania Negevensis Among Canadian Inuit Infants Hospitalized With Lower Respiratory Tract Infections
History of North Dakota
"with a new preface and postscript".
'Home' Placed: Old Swan Imagines an 'Edmonton' (in an Empire), 1794-1815
Horses Still Have Special Meaning
Housing Design in Indigenous Australia
"How Will I Sew My Baskets?": Women Vendors, Market Art, and Incipient Political Activism in Anchorage, Alaska
Human Rights Complaint Filed Against MP Pankiw
Discusses the Canadian Human Rights Commission complaint filed by John Melenchuk regarding a controversial pamphlet sent out by Saskatoon Member of Parliament Jim Pankiw. At one point in the article Michael Woodiwiss contends that the essential difference between crimes committed by colonizers and contemporary Aboriginals is that the formers’ crimes went unpunished and mostly unrecorded.
Entire issue on one pdf. To access article scroll to p.8.
A Hunger for Justice
Hybridism as a Means of (De)Constructing the Old Paradigm: The Good Guys (White) Versus the Bad Ones (Red)
“I Thought You'd Call Her White Feather”: Native Women and Racial Microaggressions in Doctoral Education
Looks at the cross-cultural experiences of female Indigenous doctoral students in the United States.
"If the Story Could be Heard": Colonial Discourse and the Surrender of Indian Reserve 172
If the Weather Permits
Imagining Justice
The Impact of Culture and Social Inequality on Risk Communication: A Case Study of the Roseau River Anishinabe First Nation, Southern Manitoba
In an Arctic library: Cleaning Out those Dusty Shelves Told Me a Lot About Northern Education -- and Race
In Defense of Big Bear: The Role of Henry Ross Halpin
Including Aboriginal Issues in Forest Planning: A Case Study in Central Interior British Columbia, Canada
Indian Photographs: Amelia Frost and the Presbyterian Mission
Indian Summer Games Now On
Indigenous Populations Healing Traditions: Culture, Community and Mental Health Promotion with Canadian Aboriginal Peoples
Indigenous Women as Newspaper Representations: Violence and Action in 1960s Vancouver
Indigenous World 2017
"Investing in the Future": First Nations Education in Canada
Jemmy Jock Bird: Marginal Man on the Blackfoot Frontier
Jocelyn Reekie
Jurisdiction and First Nations Health and Health Care
"Justice From Now On": A Keynote Address to the United Church of Canada 38th General Council
"Keeping One Foot in the Community": Intergenerational Indigenous Women's Activism from the Local to the Global (and Back Again)
The Key and the Coveted: An Exposé on the Lack of First Nations Representation in First Nations Studies Programs at the College and University Level
Land-Based Learning: A Case Study Report for Educators Tasked with Integrating Indigenous Worldviews into Classrooms
Looks at the H’a H’a Tumxulaux Outdoor Education Program located in Trail, British Columbia which is targeted at 12-15 year-olds.
Landscapes of Difference: An Inquiry Into the Discourse of the National Park and Its Effects on Aboriginal Identity Production
The Legacy of Inadequate Housing
Uses federal legal ownership of on-reserve housing plus local band level politics as reasons why housing projects continue to be inferior in comparison to off-reserve housing.
Entire issue on one pdf. To access article scroll to p.9.
Legal Careers and Aboriginal People
Lifetime Physical and Sexual Abuse, Substance Abuse, Depression, and Suicide Attempts Among Native American Women
Living and Working in Oona River: A Teacher’s Guide
Recommended for Grade 11 Social Studies.
Additional material: The River People: Living and Working in Oona River student resource book.
Living on Display: Colonial Visions of Aboriginal Domestic Spaces
Maintaining a Long-Term Commitment to Children in Care: Factors That Influence the Continued Capacity of Foster Parents Who Are Raising First Nations Children With FAS/FAE in Rural and Reserve Communities
Making a Co-operative Turn: Renegotiating Culture-State Relationships
Manitoba’s Aboriginal Justice Inquiry: 1988-1990
Marie: A Disenfrancised First Nation Woman from Kipawa
Education Thesis (MEd) -- Queen's University, 2017.
Medicine River
Memory, History, and Contested Pasts: Re-imagining Sacagawea/Sacajawea
Mistawasin [Mistawasis] Pow Wow Aug. 23 2003. - Slides.
Historical note:
The Mistawasis First Nation is located approximately 68 kilometres west of the city of Prince Albert, Saskatchewan. The Nation has one reserve with an area of approximately 125.44 square kilometres. The First Nation takes its name from the name of its first chief, Chief Mistawasis. Mistawasis, or "Big Child" in English, was the first person to sign Treaty 6 in 1876.