The Tie That Binds: The Grandparent/Grandchild Relationship Among the Lumbee Indians of Robeson County, North Carolina
A Time for Burning: Traditional Indian Uses of Fire in the Western Canadian Boreal Forest
To Be or Not to Be: Counseling with American Indian Clients
To Our Readers
To Our Readers
To Our Readers
To Our Readers
To Our Readers
To Our Readers
To Our Readers
Today's Collaborator
Together as Family: Métis Children's Response to Evangelical Protestants at the Mackinaw Mission, 1823-1837
Totem Poles and the Indian New Deal
Touch a Child - They are My People: Ways to Teach American Indian Children
Towards a New Image of American Indian Women: the Renewing Power of the Feminine
Towards a Political Solution
Towards Amaamawi’izing (Collaborating) in Interdisciplinary Allyship: An Example from the Feast Centre for Indigenous STBBI Research
Tracking Jedediah Smith through Hupa Territory
Tracking Justice: The Constitution Express to Shared Sovereignty
Traditional Alaska Transition Skills: Introduction to Traditional Carving
Designed to give teens and young adults with disabilities an improved quality of life, connection to culture and increased work-related skills.
Traditional Cree Philosophy: Death, Bereavement and Healing
The Traditional Eskimo Hunters of Point Hope, Alaska: 1800-1875
Traditional Foods and Indigenous Recipes in B.C.'s Public Institutions
Traditional Harvesting Number 1: Wild Rose
Lesson plan for Grades 1-4 involves learning about growing and harvesting plants and their names in Michif.
Additional resources: Plant Harvesting Image Cards; Michif Terms Teacher Card.
Traditional Harvesting Number 2: Wild Rose
Lesson plan for Grades 4-7 goals include recognizing the importance of harvesting, and identifying and describing the uses of several plants using Michif and English terms.
Traditional Indian Healers in Northern Manitoba: An Emerging Relationship with the Health Care System
Traditional Navajo Women: Ethnographic and Life History Portrayals
Traditional Plants
Photographs of 20 plants accompanied by a brief description of their medicinal uses.
Traditional Use
Focuses on the central role caribou have played in the lives of the Dene and Inuit people.
Chapter from People and Caribou in the Northwest Territories edited by Ed Hall.
[Traditions Survive at James Bay]
Transfer of Children and the Importance of Grandmothers Among the Navajo Indians
Trappers and Traders in the Keewatin: The Fur Trade as an Agent of Acculturation
Trauma-Informed, Culturally Relevant Psychological Response in Cases of Missing or Murdered Indigenous Peoples
Traversing the Bridges of Our Lives
The Treaties and the Treaty Relationship: Celebrating 10 Years: Teacher's Guide
Set of 19 Kindergarten to Grade 12 lesson plans which focus on Manitoba.
The Treaty Imaginary and Tribal Sovereignty in South Dakota
Tribal Communities in Rural Areas
Tribal Cultural Educational Concepts in American Indian Community College Curricula
The Tribal Engagement Program (TEP) Builds Bridges for Tribal Partners
Tricks of the Trade: Northwest Coast Artifact Collecting, 1875-1925
Trickster Discourse
The Trickster of Liberty: Tribal Heirs to a Wild Baronage
Troops enroute to N.W. Rebellion, 1885
Try Everything - Commission Says
Tsilhqot’in in the Time of COVID: Strengthening Tsilhqot’in Ways to Protect Our People
[Tuberculosis: TB Treatment in South Takes Inuit From Their Families]
Turn Your Words into Actions: An Indigenous Style Guide
Tuuhikya: The Hopi Healer
Investigation into Tuuhikya, or true healers, by looking at their roles and methods in Hopi culture in both traditional and modern times.