Hollywood's Invention of the Native American, and the Myth of the Cowboy as a History
“Home and Native Land”: Aboriginal Young Women and Homelessness in the City
Home in the City: Urban Aboriginal Housing and Living Conditions
Home Truths: Highlights from BC History
Homeless Aboriginal Men: Effects of Intergenerational Trauma
Homeless Indigenous Veterans and the Current Gap in Knowledge: The State of the Literature
Homelessness
Dupuis
Homelessness, Urban Aboriginal People, and the Need for a National Enumeration
Homicide and Indigenous peoples in North America: A structural analysis
Homogeneity in Mitochondrial DNA Control Region Sequences in Swedish Subpopulations
Honoring Children, Making Relatives: Indigenous Traditional Parenting Practices Compatible With Evidence-Based Treatment
Honoring the Circle: The Impact of American Indian Tradition on Western Political Thought and Society
Honouring Life Network: Your Source for Aboriginal Youth Suicide Prevention Resources
Honouring Lives: Final Report
Honouring Sacred Relationships: Wise Practices in Indigenous Social Work
Hope and Resilience: Suicide Prevention in the Arctic
Hopi Hova: Anthropological Assumptions of Gendered Otherness in Native American Societies
Horizontal Audit on Indigenous Employment in the Banking and Financial Sector
Horizontal Inter-Ethnic Relations: Chinese and American Indians in the Nineteenth-Century American West
Horizontality: Tools for Integrative, Outcome Focused Community Development with First Nations Communities in British Columbia
Hospitalizations For Injury Among American Indian Youth in Washington
Hot Lunch Program One of Many Services to Community
Brief profile of Elder Theresa Stevenson, recipient of the National Aboriginal Achievement Award for Community Development. Theresa is recognized for her devotion to humanitarian causes such as advocating for Aboriginal role models in schools, hot lunch programs, and low income housing.
Entire issue on one pdf. To access article scroll to p.33.
House of Difference: Cultural Politics and National Identity in Canada
Housing as a Determinant of Health 2010 Annotated Bibliography
Housing as a Determinant of Health in the Sayisi Dene First Nation, Tadoule Lake, Manitoba
The Housing Conditions of Off-Reserve Aboriginal Households
Housing Conditions on a First Nations Community
Housing Discrimination among a Sample of Aboriginal People in Winnipeg and Thompson, Manitoba
Looks at perceived housing discrimination and the reactions and effects.
Chapter six from Setting the Agenda for Change, vol. 1, which is also vol. 1 in the Aboriginal Policy Research series.
Originally presented at the Aboriginal Policy Research Conference, 2002.
Housing Issues in Nuuk (Greenland) and How To Get Students Involved
Housing, Long Term Care Facilities, and Services for Homeless and Low-Income Urban Aboriginal People Living with HIV/AIDS
Housing Needs of Indigenous Women Leaving Intimate Partner Violence in Northern Communities
Housing Strategies That Improve Indigenous Health Outcomes
How Are the Aspirations of British Columbia Institute of Technology First Nations Students Defined by Their Indigenous Perspective?
How Can Community-University Engagement Address Family Violence Prevention? One Child at a Time
How Did We Get Here?: A Concise, Unvarnished Account of the History of the Relationship between Indigenous Peoples and Canada
How Do You Build A Community?: Developing Community Capacity and Social Capital in an Urban Aboriginal Setting
How Do You Patent A Landscape? The Perils of Dichotomizing Cultural and Intellectual Property
How Grandma Kate Lost Her Cherokee Blood and What This Says about Race, Blood, and Belonging in Indian Country
How "Indians" Think: Colonial Indigenous Intellectuals and the Question of Critical Race Theory
How Indigenous Mothers Experience Selecting and Using Early Childhood Development Services to Care for their Infants
Nursing Thesis (PhD) -- McMaster University, 2019.
How Native is Native If You're Native?
Argues that due a shift in attitudes, being 'Native is in' and judgements are being made as to who can legitimately claim to be Aboriginal.
Entire issue on one pdf. To access article scroll to p.11.