How Do You Patent A Landscape? The Perils of Dichotomizing Cultural and Intellectual Property
How Do You Say Watermelon?
Howard L. Gallivan Interview
Hunted and Honoured: Animal Representations in Precontact Masks from the Nunalleq Site, Southwest Alaska
Using archaeological data to better understand the role of animals in precontact Yup'ik communities.
Hybrid Voices/Hybrid Texts: A Study of Syncretism in the Works of Samson Occom, Handsome Lake, Leslie Marmon Silko and Louise Erdrich
['I Honoured Him Until the End': Storytelling of Indigenous Female Caregivers and Care Providers Focused on Alzheimer's Disease and Other Dementias (ADOD)]
Identifying and Addressing Challenges Encountered by Educators of Aboriginal Children in an Urban Setting
Implementation of Indigenous environmental heritage rights: an experience with Laitu Khyeng Indigenous community, Chittagong Hill Tracts, Bangladesh
Improving the Recruitment and Retention of Native American Students in Psychology
In Deeper Waters: Indigenous, Gendered Approaches to Sustainability
Incommensurability and Nicholas Black Elk: An Exploration
An Indian Philosophy of Education
Indians, Land, and Identity in Washington (or, Why Cross-Border Shop): A Review Essay
Indigenization in the Time of Pipelines
Indigenous Beliefs About Little People
Indigenous Collectives: A Meditation on Fixity and
Flexibility
Indigenous Cultures and Mental Health Counselling: Four Directions for Integration with Counselling Psychology
Indigenous Futures: Research Sovereignty in a Changing Social Science Landscape
Indigenous Health Primer
Indigenous History: A Bibliography
Indigenous Peoples Atlas of Canada: Teacher's Kit for Giant Floor Map
Topics include climate change, demographics, Indigenous governance, housing, human rights, Indigenous languages, migration, famous people, original place names, residential schools, seasonal cycles, symbols, timeline, trade routes, and treaties, land disputes, agreements and rights.
Although activities were created for the giant floor map, they can be adapted to the printable tile version.
Indigenous Voices: “The Old Men of the Reserves”
Indigenous Women and Colonization: Feminism and Aboriginal Women's Activism
Intellectual Property and Aboriginal People: A Working Paper
Outlines intellectual property legislation as it relates to Aboriginal peoples and overview of methods to protect traditional knowledge.
Interviewing Inuit Elders: Introduction
Inuit Stories of Being and Rebirth: Gender, Shamanism, and the Third Sex
Inuit Symbolism of the Bearded Seal
Inuit Throat-Games and Siberian Thought Singing: A Comparative, Historical, and Semiological Approach
Iroquois Language and Songs
It Consumes What It Forgets
It's Very Important That You Have a Canoe: A Case Study On The Instructional Preferences and Values of a Cree Preservice Teacher
It Sometimes Speaks to Us: Decolonizing Education by Utilizing Our Elders' Knowledge
James Waldram. The Way of the Pipe: Aboriginal Spirituality and Symbolic Healing in Canadian Prisons
Joe Kapoeze 2 Interview
Jonas Littlefear Interview
Kahwà:tsire: Indigenous Families in a Family Therapy Practice with the Indigenous Worldview as the Foundation
Kangkushot: The Life of Nyamal Lawman Peter Coppin
Karl May's Western Novels and Aspects of Their Continuing Influence
Keeoukaywin: The Visiting Way—Fostering an Indigenous Research Methodology
Keres Pueblo Concepts of Deity
Kihcitwâw Kîkway Meskocipayiwin (Sacred Changes): Transforming Gendered Protocols in Cree Ceremonies through Cree Law
Law Thesis (LL.M.)--University of Victoria, 2017.
Kijiikwewin aji: Sweetgrass Stories with Traditional Indigenous Women in Northern Ontario
Kiya Waneekah: (Don't Forget)
Knowing the Past, Facing the Future: Indigenous Education in Canada
Labrador Inuit on the Hunt: Seasonal Patterns, Techniques, and Animals as They Appear in the Early Moravian Diaries
Lacrosse: The Combat of the Spirits
The Lakota Ritual of the Sweat Lodge
Land Acknowledgment Workshop
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.