Boundaries of Social Capital in Entrepreneurship
The Boy With a Tree Growing From His Ear and Other Stories
Breechclouts: Full and Modified
Bridging Research to Practice: Native American Stories of Becoming Smoke-free
Bridging the Divide: Indigenous Communities an Archaeology into the 21st Century
Bringing Tradition Home: Aboriginal Parenting in Today's World: Facilitator's Guide
Bud Pocha Interview
Buffalo Past and Present
Uses the Madison Buffalo Jump State Park as a starting point to discuss the buffalo's importance in the economies, cosmologies, social organization, and spiritual life of Indigenous peoples of the plains. Recommended for use with Grade 9-12 students.
Building Bridges 2: A Pathway to Cultural Safety, Relational Practice and Social Inclusion: Final Report
Building on Conceptual Interpretations of Aboriginal Literacy in Anishinaabe Research: A Turtle Shaker Model
Canada, Inc.
The Relevance of Ideology to the Emergence of a Capitalist Social Formation in Rupert's Land and the "Indian Territories" of British North American, 1852 to 1885
Caregiver-Infant Attachment For Aboriginal Families
Carriers of Water: Aboriginal Women's Experiences, Relationships, and Reflections
Celebrate, 'Ohana1
Celebrating A Spiritual Journey
Celebrating Strengths: Aboriginal Students and Their Stories of Success in Schools
Change Can Happen at Any Age
Change Is in All of Us
Cherokee Wampum: War & Peace Belts: 1730 to Present
Cheyenne Moccasins with Thunderbird Designs: Part 5
Cheyenne Moccasins with Thunderbird Designs: Part 6
Cheyenne Moccasins with Thunderbird Designs: Part 7
Choctawan Aesthetics, Spirituality, and Gender Relations: An Interview with LeAnne Howe
Choosing Life: Bobby's Story: Teacher's Guide
Coming Full Circle: Looking to Grandmother Moon
Commentary: Indigenous Health Special Issue
Community Land Use Planning on First Nations Reserve and the Influence of Land Tenure: A Case Study with Penticton Indian Band
Community Voices: Traditional Native Culture and Spirituality: A Way of Life That Governs Us
Conflicting Ethics: Aboriginal Values and Religious Renaissance
Looks at four key themes through the validity of four case studies. Chapter nine from Learning, Technology, and Traditions, which is vol. 6 in the Aboriginal Policy Research series. Originally presented at the third annual Aboriginal Policy Research Conference, 2009.
Conservation Value of the North American Boreal Forest from an Ethnobotanical Perspective
La Construction des Domaines Temporel et Spirituel dans la Poésie de Louis Riel
Contemporary Native American Architecture
Contemporary North Carolina American Indian PowWow Dress: An Exploration of Tradition, Culture, and Identity
Contemporary Ritual Practice in an Aboriginal Settlement: The Warlpiri Kurdiji Ceremony
A Contextual and Iconographic Reassessment of the Headdress on Burial 11 From Hopewell Mound 25
Contributions of Culture and Language in Aboriginal Head Start in Urban and Northern Communities to Children’s Health Outcomes: A Review of Theory and Research
Converting Words: Maya in the Age of the Cross
Cooperative Research Governance: A Novel Approach in Nunavut
Coppers from From the Hood: Haida Manga Interventions and Performative Acts
Country, Native Title and Ecology
Crazy Brave: A Memoir
The Crazy Horse Memorial: A Study of a Sacred and Contested Landscape
Crazywater
Creating a Native Place: Design and Construction of the National Museum of the American Indian in Washington, DC
Cree Intellectual Traditions in History
The Cree Medicine Wheel as an Organizing Paradigm of Theories of Human Development
[Crime Report re Little Pine Reserve Indians ... Alleged Sun Dance]; [Re: Indian Sundance, Rocky Mountain House District, Alberta]
First document is a report written by Kingston, dated July 6, 1928, asks for instructions regarding whether or not participants should be charged given the fact that the event did not appear to violate the Indian Act. Second document is a letter by McCormack, describing ceremonies which took place at Rocky Mountain House and Hobbema, Alberta.