Our Stories: First Peoples in Canada
Our Stories: First Peoples in Canada
Outsourcing Reconciliation: The Government of Canada's #IndigenousReads Campaign and the Appropriation of Indigenous Intellectual Labor
Overdose Response Project Knowledge Translation Report
Overincarceration of Indigenous People: A Health Crisis
Overrepresentation of Indigenous People in the Canadian Criminal Justice System: Causes and Responses
Oviloo Tunnillie: Life & Work
Pacific Salmon in the Rapidly Changing Arctic: Exploring Local Knowledge and Emerging Fisheries in Utqiaġvik and Nuiqsut, Alaska
Palliative Care for First Nations People in British Columbia
Nursing Thesis (MSN)--University of British Columbia (Okanagan), 2019.
[Papers and Correspondence in Connection with Half-breed Claims and Other Matters Relating to the North-West Territories]
Paquin / Pocha: The Origins of a Family in the Canadian Fur Trade, 1634-1896
Parade at Regina
Paradise Gained, Lost, and Regained: Pulse Migration and the Inuit Archaeology of the Quebec Lower North Shore
[Parenting After Separation for Indigenous Families: Full Course Transcript]
Past, Present and Future: Photographic Presence in New Mexico
Paternal Involvement in a First Nations Community in Canada: The Effects of Perceived Positive Father Relationships on Adolescent Adjustment
Psychology Thesis (PhD) -- McGill University, 2019.
The Pathfinders: Women Leaders in the the Tribal College Movement
Pathways in a Forest: Indigenous Guidance on Prevention-Based Child Welfare
Pathways in a Forest: Indigenous Guidance on Prevention-Based Child Welfare
Pathways into Homelessness: Indigenous Peoples, Youth, and Seniors
Brief literature review which examines system failures and structural, individual, and relational factors.
Pathways to the International Market for Indigenous Screen Content: Success Stories, Lessons Learned from Selected Jurisdictions and a Strategy for Growth
Patrick Burke
Paul Boyer on the New Information Age
Paved Trails: Crip Poetics as an Approach Towards Decolonizing Accessibility
Perspective: A Haunting Spectre No More: The Canadian Indigenous Condition
Argues that the Canadian Indigenous condition is not related to colonialism rather it is based on an European socioeconomic structure.
The Phonology of the Hupa Language: Part I. - The Individual Sounds
Photo Vignette – T’łisalagi’ lakw School, ‘Yalis (Alert Bay), BC, early days
Photo Vignette – Whale Watching, Salish Style
Photographs of Lieutenant R. Lyndhurst Wadmore - 1885, [1910?].
Historical note:
Robinson Lyndhurst Wadmore, who was born in England in 1855, entered the Canadian forces as a lieutenant in 1883 and served with the Royal Canadian Regiment during the Northwest Resistance of 1885. Wadmore became a colonel in 1910. He died in Victoria, BC, in 1915.Photographs of North West Canada Medal of Lieutenant R. Lyndhurst Wadmore - 1885.
Historical note:
Robinson Lyndhurst Wadmore, who was born in England in 1855, entered the Canadian forces as a lieutenant in 1883 and served with the Royal Canadian Regiment during the Northwest Resistance of 1885. Wadmore became a colonel in 1910. He died in Victoria, BC, in 1915.Physician Burnout May Contribute to Racial Bias
Picture of Louis Riel's Council in 1885
Place-Based Readings Toward Disrupting Colonized Literacies: A Métissage
A Place Where It Feels Like Home: The Story of Tina Fontaine
Plan of Position at Battle of Batoche May 12th 1885
Planning Around Reserves: Probing the Inclusion of First Nations in Saskatchewan's Watershed Planning Framework
Planning for the Next Generation: Capital Infrastructure at Colleges and Universities
Playing for the Future: A Picture Book App for Cultural Reclamation and Reconciliation
Describes two games developed as part of a project to convert the book Pīsim Finds Her Miskanaw into an app. The story is inspired by the discovery of the burial site of a young Cree woman who lived in the mid-1600s, a time before contact with Europeans.
Paper from Meaningful Play Proceedings 2018 edited by Rabindra Ratan, Brian Winn, and Elizabeth LaPensee.