We Are All Related: Augmented Reality as a Learning Resource for Indigenous-Settler Relations: Teacher Handbook
We Are All Related Augmented Reality Guide: Augmented Reality as a Learning Resource for Indigenous-Settler Relations: Student Guidebook 2019
We Are All Treaty People
Comments on initiatives in the City of Saskatoon to bring together Aboriginal people, newcomers and the mainstream population through recreation, culture and business. To access article scroll to p. 26.
We are All Treaty People: New Models for a Shared Future
We Are an Indian Nation: A History of the Hualapai People
'We Are Lutherans From Germany': Music, Language, Social History and Change in Hopevale
"We Are Not Being Heard": Aboriginal Perspectives on Traditional Foods Access and Food Security
“We Are Not Privileged Enough to Have That Foundation of Language”: Pasifika Young Adults Share their Deep Concerns about the Decline of the Ancestral/Heritage Languages in Aotearoa New Zealand
We Are Our Language: An Ethnography of Language Revitalization in a Northern Athabaskan Community
'We are Still Didene': Stories of Hunting and History from Northern British Columbia
We Are Your Children, We Are Your Future: Developing Indigenous-Centred Parenting Support for Children with Mild to Moderate Anxiety
We Belong to the Land: Native Americans Experiencing and Coping with Racial Microagressions
“We Belong to the Land”: Samburu People’s Legal Battle to Save Lands in Kenya
"We call that treaty ground": The Representation of Aboriginal Land Disputes in Wayland Drew's Halfway Man and M.T. Kelly's A Dream Like Mine
We Can Do Better: Housing in Inuit Nunangat
We Can Do Better: Housing in Inuit Nunangat: Report of the Standing Senate Committee on Aboriginal Peoples
We Can Do It (Education) Better: An Examination of Four Secondary School Approaches For Aboriginal Students in Northwestern Ontario
We Can See the Gap: Regional Eye Health Coordination for Indigenous Australians
'We Could Be the Turn-Around Generation': Harnessing Aboriginal Fathers' Potential to Contribute to Their Children's Well-Being
“We Don’t Drink the Water Here”: The Reproduction of Undrinkable Water for First Nations in Canada
We Flail in Life Until We Understand Basic Truths
Author reflects on not knowing the Ojibway truth of things until later in life due to being brought up in a foster home.
Entire issue on one pdf. To access article scroll to p.12.
"We get our education from the land": Student Perspectives of Indigenous Food Sovereignty
Health Thesis (MA) -- Dalhousie University, 2019
"We Have Bigotry All Right—but No Alabamas": Racism and Aboriginal Protest in Canada during the 1960s
We Have to Hear Their Voices: A Research Project on Aboriginal Languages and Art Practices
We Interrupt This Program: Indigenous Media Tactics in Canadian Culture
"We Let Them Be Our Extended Family": Disentangling Stó:lō Families From the Colonial Past
"We Lived It": Stories of Cultural Resilience, Dinék'ehgo Nanitiin (Diné-Based Instruction), and Navigating Between University and Tribal Institutional Review Boards
We, Maasai: Revitalizing Indigenous Language and Knowledge for Sustainable Development in Maasailand, Kenya
"We Must Teach the Indian What Law Is": The Laws of Indian Residential Schools in Canada
Chronology of the laws that created and enforced Indian Residential Schools.
“We Need New Stories”: Trauma, Storytelling, and the Mapping of Environmental Injustice in Linda Hogan’s Solar Storms and Standing Rock
"We Put Down Our Weapons and Picked Up a Microphone”
'We’re a Dreaming Country': Guidelines for Interpretation of Aboriginal Heritage (2012)
"We're Gonna Capture Johnny Depp": Making Kin with Cinematic Comanches
"We're Rapping, Not Trapping": Hip Hop as a Contemporary Expression of Métis Culture and a Conduit to Literacy
"We See Hard Times Ahead of Us": York Factory and Indigenous Life in the Western Hudson Bay Region, 1880-1925
"We Should Be Listening to Our Elders": Evaluation of Transfer of Indigenous Knowledge Between Anishinabe Youth and Elders
We Still Live Here--Âs Nutayuneaân
We Were Children
We Were Children: A Film by Timothy Wolochatiuk: Facilitator's Guide
"We Were Those Who Walked Out of Bullets and Hunger": Representation of Trauma and Healing in "Solar Storms"
We Will Be Known Forever by the Tracks We Leave: Rising Up to Meet The Reproductive Health Needs of American Indian/Alaska Native Youth
[We Will Dance Our Truth: Yaqui History in Yoeme Performances]
Weather through the Seasons: An Integrated Science Learning Unit for Yukon Grade 4 Students
Weathering Changes: Cultivating Local and Traditional Knowledge of Environmental Change in Tr’ondëk Hwëch’in Traditional Territory
Weathering Uncertainty: Traditional Knowledge for Climate Change Assessment and Adaptation
Weaving and Baking Nation: The Recognition Politics of the Métis Sash and Bannock in the 1990s
History Thesis (M.A.)--University of British Columbia, 2019.
Looks at the Oral History Project of the Métis Women of Manitoba Inc.
Weaving for the Environment and Future Generations, Bazaar Artist: Porfirio Gutierrez
Weaving Intersectional Rhetoric: The Digital Counternarratives of Indigenous Feminist Bloggers
Weaving Math
Uses techniques involved in creating a Coast Salish blanket to teach concepts of slope and equations in Grade 10 Mathematics Curriculum.