From Indigenous Economies to Market-Based Self-Governance: A Feminist Political Economy Analysis
From Interstellar Imperialism to Celestial Wayfinding: Prime Directives and Colonial Time-Knots in SETI
From JSTOR to Jiní: Incorporating Traditional Knowledge in Teaching Information Literacy at Tribal Colleges
From Savagery to Civilization: The Canadian North-West: Its History and Its Troubles from the Early Days ... and the Narrative of Three Insurrections
From Shining Path to Truth Commission: A Brief History of the Political Regimes of the 1980s and 1990s and the Truth Commissions in Peru
From Sisyphus to Métis: The Transformative Power of Literary Métissage
From Speaking Ngiyampaa to Speaking English
From Student to President, Alexander Takes Helm at FNU
From the Indian Adoption Project to the Indian Child Welfare Act: The Resistance of Native American Communities
From the Tomahawk Chop to the Road Block: Discourses of Savagism in Whitestream Media
From the Whitehorse Mining Initiative Towards Sustainable Mining: Lessons Learned
From Tradition to Evidence: Decolonization of the Evidence-Based Practice System
From Where I am Standing: Indigenous Narrative and Photo Documentary
Frontier Justice: Colonial Governmentalities and 19th Century "Law and Order" in the North-West
The Frontier Newspapers and the Coverage of the Plains Indian Wars
The Frozen Bodies of Edward S. Curtis
The Frozen Family From the Utqiagvik Site, Barrow, Alaska
FSIN Honours Founding Fathers
FSIN Should Go Back to Roots With Humility
Full Blood, Mixed Blood, Generic, and Ersatz: The Problem of Indian Identity
Funding Yet to be Secured for Additional Year
Reports on the decision to add one more year to the mandate of the Truth and Reconciliation Commission in Canada regarding the Residential School Settlement Agreement.
Entire issue on one pdf. To access article scroll to p.8.
The Funeral of Louis Riel
Primarily transcripts of articles from the Daily Manitoban dated November 19th, 1885 and December 12th, 1885, and a translation of brief article from Le Métis dated December 17th, 1885.
The Fur Trade and Early Capitalist Development in British Columbia
Fur Trade and Métis Settlements in the Lake Superior Region, 1820-50
[Fur Trade Learning Plan]
Intended for Grade 4 Social Studies.
Fur Trader Game
For use with the article The Business That Created a Country found on p. 6 of the special issue "How Furs Built Canada" in Kayak: Canada's History Magazine for Kids. Suitable for Grades1 to 5.
A Fur Trader's Photographs: A.A. Chesterfield in the District of Ungava, 1901-4
Future Entrepreneurs Learning the Biz Ropes
The Future in the Past of Native and Indigenous Studies
The Future of Native Studies: A Modest Manifesto
G-Men, Green Men, and Red Land: Extraterrestrial Miscreants, Federal Jurisdiction, and Exceptional Space
Gabriel Dumont
Gabriel Dumont (1837-1906) Man of Action
Gabriel Dumont: Métis Legend
Brief video discusses the life of the Metis leader and his role in the 1885 Resistance. Duration: 7:25.
Related Material: Transcript; Teacher's Guide.
Gabriel Dumont - Portrait
Gabriel’s Queer Difference in Highway’s Kiss of the Fur Queen
Gambling in Greenlandic Adolescents
Gambling, Internet and Media Use: Qanuilirpitaa? 2017: Nunavik Inuit Health Survey
Garden Hill Comprehensive Community Planning Project: Process Report, December 2011
Gashkiwidoon Tookit: COVID-19 Vaccine Implementation
Topics include collaboration with heathcare providers, communication strategies, determining vaccine numbers, clinic implementation, and vaccination after care.
Gathering Native Scholars and Artists: A Celebration of Forty Years—October 22 and 23, 2009
GDI Launches New Books at This Year's Back to Batoche
GDI Launches Two New Initiatives
Gee Meeyo Pimawtshinawn (It Was a Good Life): Saskatchewan Métis Road Allowance Memories: A Living Heritage Project
The Gehl Report: Indigenous Women and Girls with Disabilities and Gender-Based Violence
Intersectional analysis of key literature and research projects.
Gender-Based Analysis of Inuit Women-Owned Businesses: Final Report
Gender, Subsistence, Change, and Resilience in Quinhagak’s Present and Past
Examines archeological evidence and interviews to learn how the Yup'ik adapted to changes in their environmental and social world.