Live-In Family Enhancement (LIFE): A Comprehensive Program for Healing and Family Reunification
The Lives of Stories: Three Aboriginal-Settler Friendships
Living between Two Worlds: The Experience of Urban Aboriginal People in Developing Their Cultural Identity While Being Raised Within the Majority Culture
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.
Living in Two Worlds: First Nations Women Leaders' Perspectives on Cultural Continuity, Cultural Identity, and Youth
'Living the Same as the White People': Mohawk and Anishinabe Women's Labour in Southern Ontario, 1920-1940
Living Through the Generations: Continuity and Change in Navajo Women's Lives.
Living Together - Acting Together: Government Brief Submitted to the Public Inquiry Commission on Relations between Indigenous Peoples and Certain Public Services in Québec
Justice
The Lizottes of Fort Vermilion and the Pre-1900 Evolution of a Metis Community
Local Government-First Nation Partnerships: Forging Strong Relationships among Municipal, Regional and First Nation Governments in British Columbia
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.
Locating Ourselves in the Place of Creation: The Academy as Kitsu'lt melkiko'tin
The Long Journey Home, 96 Miles Up the Porcupine River / Ch’oodeenjik, Yukon
Looking to the Land: Local Responses to Food Insecurity in Two Rural and Remote First Nations
Lorna Roth. Something New in the Air
Los Aché del Paraguay: Discusión de un Genocidio
"Loss Must Be Marked and It Cannot Be Represented": Memorializing Sex Workers in Vancouver's West End
Lost and Forgotten: Sex Workers on Vancouver's Downtown Eastside
Lost in Translation? Exploring Outcomes of Nunavut’s Resource Development Training and Employment Policies for Inuit of Northern Baffin Island
The Lubicon Lake Nation: Indigenous Knowledge and Power
Magic Weapons: Aboriginal Writers Remaking Community After Residential School
Main Findings of the 2015 RHS
Maintaining Identities: The Soul Work of Adoption and Aboriginal Children
Make Yourself (Un)Comfortable: Lawrence Paul Yuxweluptun at the Museum
Making Home Work: Domesticity and Native American Assimilation in the American West, 1860-1919
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
Making Research Relevant: Grant Assessment Processes in Indigenous Research
Making Sense of Aboriginal Education in Canadian Public Schools: a Case Study of Four Inner City Elementary Principals and Their Vision of Aboriginal Education
Examines the concept of Aboriginal education as seen by four urban, inner-city elementary school principals and how they see it being put into practice in their schools.
Making Sober Citizens: The Legacy of Indigenous Alcohol Regulation in Canada, 1777-1985
Making Space For Aboriginal Feminism
Making the Lazy Indian
Makúk: A New History of Aboriginal-White Relations
A Man of All Tribes: The Life of Alick Jackomos
Management of Aboriginal Child Protection Services: Ministry of Children and Family Development
Manitoba First Nations Oral History Survival Booklet
The Many Lives of Justiniano Roxas: The Centenarian Fantasy in American History and Memory
The Mäori All Blacks and the Decentering of the White Subject: Hyperrace, Sport, and the Cultural Logic of Late Capitalism
Māori and Educational Leadership: Tū Rangatira
Māori and Indigenous Housing Annotated Bibliography: Kāinga Tahi Kāinga Rua Strategic Research Direction
Literature included from 2000 forward and covers books, academic papers, theses, and website articles.
Māori and Informal Caregiving: A Background Paper
Discusses how Māori conceptualize whānau (family), Māori perspectives on caregiving, roles assumed by carers, impacts on them, and available supports and summarizes results of literature review.