What We Were Told: Responses to “65,000 Years of Aboriginal History”
What Would It Take?: Youth Across Canada Speak Out on Youth Homelessness Prevention
"Wheeler, Arthur O."
When Black Lives Matter Meets Indian Country: Using the Cherokee and Chickasaw Nations as Case Studies for Understanding the Evolution of Public History and Interracial Coalition
When Consumerism and Art Collide: A Question of Identity
When Disinformation Turns Deadly: The Case of Missing and Murdered Indigenous Women and Girls in Canadian Media
When Do Ideas of an Arctic Treaty Become Prominent in Arctic Governance Debates?
When is Indigeneity: Closing a Legal and Sociocultural Gap in a Contested Domestic/International Term
"When My Hands Are Empty / I Will Be Full": Visualizing Two-Spirit Bodies in Chrystos's Not Vanishing
When Research is Relational: Supporting the Research Practices of Indigenous Studies Scholars
When the Children Left
Short documentary about a woman's sister who died while completing her high school away from home.
When the Earth Shakes: A Status Report on Dissertation Research Regarding Mexican Volcanoes
When White People Talk About Their Country Being Stolen (I Throw Up in My Mouth a Little Bit)
"When Willow Roots Start to Thaw, People Come Back to Life...": Relations of Chukchi Reindeer Herders to Plants
Examines the relationship between reindeer herders and ethnobotany.
Where Are Our American Indian/Alaska Native Boys and Young Men?: Understanding Postsecondary Education Trends
Where Are the Children Buried?
General overview of historical context along with examples of specific schools for illustrative purposes and 'gap analysis' to recommend areas where further research is required. Second part of report is a more detailed summary of information on each school’s location and construction sequence, duration of operation, and reported cemeteries.
"Where You Have to Bypass" History, Memory, and Multiple Temporalities of Innu Cultural Landscapes
Whispering Tales: Using Augmented Reality to Enhance Cultural Landscapes and Indigenous Values
White Backlash against Indigenous Peoples in Canada
White Cap, Sioux Chief
White Lies, Native Revisions: The Legacy of Violence in the American West
White Man Got No Dreaming: Essays 1938-1973
The White Man’s Camera: The National Film Board of Canada and Representations of Indigenous Peoples in Post-War Canada
History Thesis (PhD) -- University of Manitoba, 2021.
The White People Problem: Experiments in the Reverse Gaze.
The White Stone Canoe: A Legend of the Ottawas
The White Woman’s Indian: Laura Gilpin in the American Southwest
[Whitehorse Point-in-Time Count] 2018 Report
Whitehorse Point in Time Count 2021: Community Report
“Whitman’s Song Sung the Navajo Way”
Who Are Our Enemies? Racism and the Australian Working Class
Who are the "Aboriginal Peoples of Canada"? Case Comment on R. v. Desautel, 2021 SCC 17
Who Gets to Tell the Stories? Carlisle Indian School: Imagining a Place of Memory Through Descendant Voices
Examines boarding school through the lenses of the student's descendants recollections of their families experiences. Through these means the stories will continued to be told once there are no more living alumni.
Who Holds the Frame?: Language as Representation in the Art of Emmi Whitehorse and Maria Hupfield
Who Is a Status Indian?
Who Is Research Serving? A Systematic Realist Review of Circumpolar Environment-Related Indigenous Health Literature
Who Knows What about Gorillas? Indigenous Knowledge, Global Justice, and Human-Gorilla Relations.
Who Lies Buried in Satanta’s Tomb? Co-memorating a Kiowa Warrior
A “Whole-Community” Approach for Sustainable Digital Infrastructure in Remote and Northern First Nations
“Whose voices are not in the room?” Indigenous Women’s Participation in the Arctic Climate Crisis Research
Whose Water Is It Anyway? Indigenous Water Sovereignty in Canada: An Indigenous Resurgence Analysis of the Case of Halalt First Nation v British Columbia
Why Indigenous Literatures Matter
Wild Card: Making Sense of Adoption and Indigenous Citizenship Orders in Settler Colonial Contexts
Foreword to Special Issue on Adoption and Indigenous Citizenship Orders highlights the topics, authors and social contexts to be covered in the issue.
Wildlife Management in Nunavik: Structures, Operations, and Perceptions Following the James Bay and Northern Quebec Agreement
“William Apess Was Born Here”: Marking William Apess on the Geographical and Cultural Map
William Bleasdell Cameron and Horse Child
Historical note:
Winnipeg Cavalry at Fort Qu'Appelle, North-West Rebellion, 1885
Wisconsin Act 31 Compliance: Reflecting on Two Decades of American Indian Content in the Classroom
Reflects on the twenty years since the implementation of the Wisconsin Act 31, requiring schools to teach about Indigenous culture and tribal sovereignty, which the State still struggles to implement.