Interior of Fort Pitt, Just [Before] the Rebellion of 1885
Internal Colonialism and Native Americans: Indian Labor in the United States From 1871 to World War II
Interview Tape #2 with Agnes Amyotte Fisher and Celina Amyotte Poitras
Interview with Agnes Amyotte Fisher and Celina Amyotte Poitras
Interview with Maxime and Mrs. Gervais
Introducing Our Guest Editor in Western Australia
Introduction
Introduction [Studies in American Indian Literatures, Series 2, vol.3 no.2]
Introduction to the Special Issue
Inuit and the Criminal Justice System: Future Strategies for Socio-Legal Control and Prevention
The Inuit Community Workers' Experience of Youth Protection
Inuit Redistribution and Development: Processes of Change in the Eastern Canadian Arctic, 1922-1968
Inuit Television Broadcasting: Cultural Identity and Expression in a New Medium
Inventive Modeling: Rainy Mountain's Way to Composition
An Investigation of Locus of Control in Dene and Non-Dene Students
Investigations into the Present and Future State of Aboriginal Mental Health
Irene Dimick #1 Interview
Irene Dimick #2 Interview
Irene Dimick Interview #3
An Iron Hand Upon the People: The Law Against the Potlatch on the Northwest Coast
Irony and Indians: A Collection of Original Fiction
Is That All There Is? Tribal Literature
Discussion on stories that make up tribal literature and the fact that all words have three levels of meaning: the surface, the fundamental, and, underlying both, the philosophical meaning.
Isabelle Beads Interview
Isabelle Betty Roy Interview
Isinamowin: The White Man's Indian
Issue of Self-Determination Avoided: U.N. Working Group on Indigenous Populations
J.R. Miller. Skyscrapers Hide the Heavens: A History of Indian-White Relations in Canada
James Simon
Janet R. Fietz
Jean Baptiste Racette Interview
Jean (John) Paul Ouellette Interview
General account of Mr. Ouellette's life and Métis
history.Jim Groves Interview
Jim Panamick 1
Jim Panamick 2
Joe Blondeau Interview
Joe McAuley Remembers: "Today Everything Is Different"
Joe Morin: "I Told Myself I Shouldn't Have Come"
Joe Sylvester Interview
Consists of an interview with Joe Sylvester where he gives an account of Indian medicine; legends concerning migration of Algonquin Indians; the role of elders; of the deterioration of reservation conditions following World War II; the religious significance of the number "four"; views on welfare and its role in disrupting traditional Indian values; and a legend about the origin of the drum.
John Collier: Architect of Sovereignty or Assimilation?
[John Franklin Boyd]
Notes and sketches from a trip taken by John Franklin Boyd in July and August, 1885, from Minnedosa, Manitoba to visit Prince Albert and the places involved in the North-West Rebellion.