Community Healing and Aboriginal Social Security Reform
Complementary Power: Men and Women of the Lenni Lenape
Concepts of Spirituality in the Works of Robert Houle and Otto Rogers with Special Consideration to Images of the Land
Confronting HIV and AIDS: A Personal Account
Consuming Geist: Popontology and the Spirit of Capital in Indigenous Australia
Contemporary Two-Spirit Identity in the Fiction of Paula Gunn Allen and Beth Brant
COVID-19 and Indigenous Health and Wellness: Our Strength is in Our Stories: An RSC Collection of Stories
Cree Mother Loses Organ Harvest Fight
Relates how a non-Aboriginal parent's right to harvest organs and cremate an adoptive son superseded a Cree biological mother's right to bury her adult son according to First Nation spiritual and cultural beliefs.
Entire issue on one pdf. To access article scroll to p.1.
[Cree Star Stories]
Cultural Continuity as a Hedge Against Suicide in Canada's First Nations
Examines self-continuity or self-identity as a protective factor against suicide.
Cultural Practices in American Indian Prevention Programs
Cultural Safety: Honoring Traditional Ways of Life
A Culturally Derived Framework of Values-Driven Transformation in Māori Economies of Well-Being (Ngā hono ōhanga oranga)
Culture as Cultural Defense: An American Indian Sacred Site in Court
Culture Inspires Art: Featuring First Nations, Métis, and Inuit Artists
The Culture is Prevention Project: Measuring Culture As a Social Determinant of Mental Health for Native/Indigenous Peoples
[A Death Feast in Dimlahamid]
The Death of Jim Loney as a Bicultural Novel
A Disarming Laughter: The Role of Humor in Tribal Cultures: An Examination of Humor in Contemporary Native American Literature and Art
A Discussion Paper: Ending Sexual Violence and Sexual Exploitation in First Nation Communities
Drawing upon the Wealth of Indigenous Laws in the Yukon
Dreaming With the First Shaman (Noaidi)
Dreams and Vision Quests in Janet Campbell Hale’s The Owl’s Song
Drugs, Spirituality and the Family
Early Nuxalk Masks
Eating the Heart of Weetigo World: Decolonial Imaginaries in the Stories of Louise Erdrich and Tomson Highway
English Thesis (Ph.D)--City University of New York, 2020.
The Elder Transcripts: History You Can't Get From a Book
Electronic Computer and Stub Pencil: Poetry and the Writing-in of Ralph Salisbury
Encyclopedia of Native American Shamanism: Sacred Ceremonies of North America
Enhancing the Role of Aboriginal Communities in Corrections
The Enola Hill Controversy: Deconstructing an American Indian Sacred Site
Experiencing Literacy In and Out of School: Case Studies of Two American Indian Youths
Exploring Indigenous Approaches to Evaluation and Research in the Context of Victim Services and Supports
Pacific Historical Review, Vol. 71, No. 1, February 2002, pp. 153-155
Facilitating Native American High School Success: Learning From The Graduates
Factors Contributing to Resilience in Aboriginal Persons Who Attended Residential Schools
Family Preservation: Concepts In American Indian Communities
First Nation Family Culture: Implications for the Classroom
First Nations Perspectives on Poverty: "It's not in our culture to be poor"
First Nations Youth HIV/AIDS Education Manual
Fleur Pillager’s Bear Identity in the Novels of
Louise Erdrich
Forging the Prairie West
The Fourth World: Aboriginal Women's Activism and Feminism
Freud, Marx and Chiapas in Leslie Marmon Silko’s Almanac of the Dead.
From Big Green Fly to the Stone Serpent:
Following the Dark Vision in Silko’s Almanac of the Dead
A Gift From the Little People
Billy Wapass Jr. presents his family's version of the ancient legend that depicts the origin of the Hand Games.
Entire issue on one pdf. To access article scroll to p.13.
Give Christ the Freedom To Build His Native Church
Global and Transnational Flows and Local Cree Youth Culture
Grade 3: Mawi-amskwesewey Ankukumkewey na ujit Kkijinu Maqamikew = The First Treaty is with Our Earth Mother = Amsqahsewey Lakutuwakon Wiciw Kci Kikuwosson
Content focused on the Mi'kmaq, Wolastoqewiyik, and Passamaquoddy (Peskotomuhkati) peoples of New Brunswick.