Survey of Issues and Challenges to Providing Market Housing Finance in the Territories
Survey of Northern Informal and Formal Mental Health Practitioners
Survey on Indigenous Teachers Manitoba Report 2017
Survey asked questions about ancestry, cultural-linguistic identity, participation in professional learning activities, language fluency, knowledge of specific Indigenous subject areas, and comfort level in integrating Indigenous perspectives in the classroom.
Related Material:
Table 1: Proportion of Aboriginal Identity Population, First Nations People, Métis and Inuit for Selected Aboriginal Language Indicators, Canada, 2011
Table 105-0512: Health Indicator Profile, by Aboriginal Identity, Age Group and Sex, Four Year Estimates, Canada, Provinces and Territories: Occasional Rate [2011 to 2014]
Table 105-0513: Health Indicator Profile, by Aboriginal Identity and Sex, Age-standardized Rate, Four Year Estimates, Canada, Provinces and Territories: Occasional (Rate ) [2007 to 2010]
Table 2: Percentage Distribution of the Population by Knowledge of Official Languages for Selected Aboriginal Identity Categories, Canada, 2011
Table 3: Population Who Reported an Aboriginal Mother Tongue, Population Who Reported an Ability to Conduct a Conversation in an Aboriginal Language and Population who Reported an Ability to Conduct a Conversation in an Aboriginal Language That is Not Their Mother Tongue, For Selected Aboriginal Identity Categories, Canada, 2011
Table 4: Population Who Reported an Aboriginal Mother Tongue and Population who Reported an Aboriginal Mother Tongue but who Could not Conduct a Conversation in that Language, for Selected Aboriginal Identity Categories, Canada, 2011
Table 477-0133: Employment Status by Sex, Aboriginal Status and Immigrant Status, Canada: Occasional
Table 5: Total Population and Population who Reported an Ability to Conduct a Conversation in an Aboriginal Language for Selected First Nations Population Groups, Canada, 2011
Table 6: Total Inuit Population and Inuit Population who Reported an Ability to Conduct a Conversation in an Inuit Language by Area of Residence--Inuit Nanangut, Canada, 2011
Tairāwhiti Māori Economic Development Report: Critical Analysis and Strategic Options
Te Ara Whakapiki Taitamariki: Youth’12
Te Kōrerotia o te reo Māori
Te Ohonga Ake: The Determinants of Health for Māori Children and Young People in New Zealand
Te Reo Māori me ōna Ratonga
Te Reo Māori me te Hapori
Te Reo Māori me te Tuakiri Ā-Motu
Te Reo Māori me te Wāhi Mahi
Te Reo Māori me te Whānau
Ten-Year Experience of Fetal Alcohol Spectrum Disorder: Diagnostic and Resource Challenges in Indigenous Children
Those Who Take Us Away: Abusive Policing and Failures in Protection of Indigenous Women and Girls in Northern British Columbia, Canada
Thule Winter Site Demography in the High Arctic
Total Population Aged 15 Years and Over by Language Spoken Most Often at Work, for Nunavut and its Communities, 2011 NHS (National Household Survey)
Towards a Maori Statistics Framework
Discusses the process of developing a system of gathering statistics for and about the Maori. Objectives were to ensure information was relevant, enhance knowledge and use of statistics at community level, and improve statistical capabilities in community organizations. Chapter fourteen from Moving Forward, Making a Difference, vol. 1, which is also vol. 3 in the Aboriginal Policy Research series. Originally presented at the second annual Aboriginal Policy Research Conference, 2006.
Tracking the Westernization of Urban Aboriginal Gambling in Canada's Prairie Provinces
Tracking the Westernization of Urban Aboriginal Gambling in Canada's Prairie Provinces
Transformative Networks: How ACADRE/NEAHR Support for Graduate Students has Impacted Aboriginal Health Research in Canada
The Transition from the Historical Inuit Suicide Pattern to the Present Inuit Suicide Pattern
Traces trends in Nunavut, Nunavik, Alaska, Greenland and the Circumpolar region, and discusses possible explanations for increases in the suicide rate.
Chapter three from Moving Forward, Making a Difference, vol. 2, which is also vol. 4 in the Aboriginal Policy Research series.
Originally presented at the second annual Aboriginal Policy Research Conference, 2006.