The Context of the State of Nature
Continuing Atrocities by Canadian Police Against First Nations People
The Continuing Saga of Indian Land Claims: Concluding Commentary
The Continuing Saga of Indian Land Claims: Not All Aboriginal Territory is Truly Irredeemable
The Continuing Saga of Indian Land Claims: The Catawba Indian Land Claim: A Giant among Indian Land Claims
The Continuing Saga of Indian Land Claims: The Coeur D'Alene Tribe's Claim to Lake Coeur D'Alene
The Continuing Saga of Indian Land Claims: Zuni Claims: An Expert Witness' Reflection
Continuity and Change in Wemindji Cree Childbirth Experiences and Practices: Past and Present
Anthropology Thesis (PhD) -- McGill University, 2019.
Contributions of Inuit Ecological Knowledge to Understanding the Impacts of Climate Change on the Bathurst Caribou Herd in the Kitikmeot Region, Nunavut
A Conversation with Lisa Brooks about Our Beloved Kin
A Conversation With Mary Brave Bird
A Conversation with Simon Ortiz
Conversations with First Nations Educators: Weaving Identity into Pedagogical Practice
A Convoy of Northwest Police on the March - Sketch. - 1885.
Cooloola Coast, Noosa to Fraser Island: The Aboriginal and Settler Histories of a Unique Environment
Cooperative Learning and the Education of American Indian/Alaskan Native Students: A Review of the Literature and Suggestions For Implementation
Cooperative Management in Alberta: an Applied Approach to Resource Management and Consultation with First Nations
Cooptation and Control: The Reconstruction of Inuit Birth
The Coos and Coquille: A Northwest Coast Historical Anthropology
Copy of illustration: "Escape of the McKay family through the ice to Prince Albert"
Copy of Illustration from ILLUSTRATED WAR NEWS, April 4, 1885
Copy of Official Reports (116H) from Major General Middleton, C.B. (Commanding North-West Field Force), Concerning the Engagements at Fish Creek, on the 24th April, 1885, Poundmaker's Camp (Near Cree's Reserve) 2nd May, 1885, Batoche, 9th, 10th, 11th and 12th May, 1885
Copyright Issues Regarding Inuit Art
Brief discussion of artists' right to control reproduction and exhibition of their work and their moral right to the integrity of their creations.
The Corbiere Ruling
Cormack's Quest
Cornelius Mathews: A Study of His Depiction of Native Americans in Post-Jacksonian America
Correlates of Health-Care Use: Inuit and Cree of Northern Quebec
The Cost of Discrimination in Latin America
The Cost of Quality First Nations Education
Cost of the Revised Northern Food Basket in 2018-2019
Coulee at Fort Qu'Appelle, N.W.T.
Counseling Intervention and American Indian Tradition: An Integrative Approach
Counting Coup: A True Story of Basketball and Honor on the Little Big Horn
The Courts, Government, and Public Policy: The Significance of R. v. Marshall
Cowboys and Indians: The Image of the Indian in American Literature
Cowboys, Ranchers and the Cattle Business: Cross-Border Perspectives on Ranching History
Coyote, He/She Was Going There: Sex and Gender
in Native American Trickster Stories
'Cranial Connections': Queensland's 'Talgai Skull' Debate of 1918 and Custodianship of the Past
Creating Anthologies and Other Dangerous Practices
Creating Choices: The Report of the Task Force on Federally Sentenced Women
Creating Culturally Responsive Learning Situations for Alaska Native Adults Based on Their Values
Creating the Image of the Savage in Defence of the Crown: The Ethnohistorian in Court
Creation and Dissolution of the Alaska State-Operated School System
Cree Chiefs from Crooked Lake
Cree Council on Sweetgrass Reserve
Cree Language Lessons
Cree Mother Loses Organ Harvest Fight
Relates how a non-Aboriginal parent's right to harvest organs and cremate an adoptive son superseded a Cree biological mother's right to bury her adult son according to First Nation spiritual and cultural beliefs.
Entire issue on one pdf. To access article scroll to p.1.
Crime Prevention for Aboriginal Communities
[Crime Report re Little Pine Reserve Indians ... Alleged Sun Dance]; [Re: Indian Sundance, Rocky Mountain House District, Alberta]
First document is a report written by Kingston, dated July 6, 1928, asks for instructions regarding whether or not participants should be charged given the fact that the event did not appear to violate the Indian Act. Second document is a letter by McCormack, describing ceremonies which took place at Rocky Mountain House and Hobbema, Alberta.