Childhood Experiences Affect Aboriginal Offenders
Children and the Future: Indian Education at Wallaceburg District Secondary School
Examines a collaboration between the Walpole Island First Nation and the neighboring Wallaceburg District Secondary School to improve the education of Indigenous students and what can be learned to address persistent educational issues for Indigenous populations nationwide.
Children Lost through Welfare
Children of the Dragonfly: Native American Voices on Child Custody and Education
Children's Growth - The Use of Growth Charts
Chilocco Indian Boarding School : Tool for Assimilation, Home for Indian Youth
Chippewas of the Thames First Nation Inquiry: Clench Defalcation Claim
Choosing a Different Direction
Choosing Border Work
A personal reflection of a non-Indigenous researcher conducting research in within Indigenous communities.
Chosen Peoples: Aboriginals are Now Being Courted by Universities Across the Country
Chretien Should Look For a Graceful Exit
Christmas in the 1940’s
Christopher Columbus: Lost Havens in the Ruins of Representation
Church Woes in US Could Help Lawsuits in Canada
Discusses whether the federal government will choose to initiate alternative dispute resolution as opposed to litigation in resolving the 700 Indian Residential school lawsuits in British Columbia.
Entire issue on one pdf. To access article scroll to p.7.
Churches, Government Still Squabbling Over School Issue
Focuses on the residential school survivors conference theme of pressure strategies for improved claim resolution
Entire issue on one pdf. To access article scroll to p.14.
Cincinnati’s Wild West: The 1896 Rosebud Sioux Encampment
Circles of Power: Life Histories of Native American Indian Women Elders in Education
Cis Dideen Kat - When Plumes Rise: The Way of the Lake Babine Nation
Citizen of the Year: An Inspiration To All
Citizens Plus: Aboriginal Peoples and the Canadian State
Citizenship and Indian Peoples: The Ambiguous Legacy of Internal Colonialism
CityScapes Roundtable: "Approaches to Current Challenges Facing Urban Aboriginal Peoples"
Claiming the Stones, Naming the Bones: Cultural Property and the Negotiation of National and Ethnic ldentity
The Class Action as a Remedy for Abuse Experienced in Residential Schools: Institutional Abuse & Public Response: A NWAC Discussion Paper
Clinician’s Guide: Working with Native Americans Living with HIV
Clippings re: Edgar Mapletoft
Closing the Gaps? The Politics of Māori Affairs Policy
Cloth & Clay: Communicating Culture
Clothes That are Not Worn (except...): The Politics of the Clothing Collection at the Museum of Anthropology
Clothing In The Arctic: A Means Of Protection, A Statement of Identity
Co-Management of Forest Resources in Canada: An Economically Optimal Institutional Arrangement
Co-Morbid Symptoms of Depression and Conduct Disorder in First Nations Children: Some Findings From the Flower of Two Soils Project
Cody Wild West Days / May 11, 2002 - Poster.
Historical note:
Buffalo Bill Cody helped found Cody, Wyoming in 1895, and established his TE Ranch in the area.Collating Divergent Discourses: Positing the Critic as Culture-Broker in Reading Native American Texts
Collecting History: Franz Boas, George Hunt and the Museum Movement, 1883--1916
Collecting Native America, 1870-1960
The Collecting of Bones for Anthropological Narratives
Collective Guilt, Conservation and Other Postmodern Messages in Contemporary Westerns: Last of the Dogmen and Grey Owl
The College on the Hill
Colonel Otter Attacking the rebels at Cut Knife Hill, North-West Territory - Sketch. - 1885.
Historical note:
On 2 May 1885 Lieutenant Colonel William Otter was defeated by Poundmaker's war chief Fine-Day at the Battle of Cut Knife near Battleford, SK. A flying column of Canadian militia and army regulars was defeated by Poundmaker despite their use of a Gatling gun.