Wisconsin Act 31 Compliance: Reflecting on Two Decades of American Indian Content in the Classroom
Reflects on the twenty years since the implementation of the Wisconsin Act 31, requiring schools to teach about Indigenous culture and tribal sovereignty, which the State still struggles to implement.
Wisdom in Quiet Observation: Hospice Palliative Social Work
[Wise Practices]: Annotated Bibliography
Wise Practices for Cultural Safety in Electronic Health Research and Clinical Trials with Indigenous People: Secondary Analysis of a Randomized Clinical Trial
With the Best Will in the World: Some Records of Early White Contact with the Gampignal on the Australian Agricultural Company's Estate at Port Stephens
Within the Grasp of Company Law: Land, Legitimacy, and the Racialization of the Métis, 1815-1821
Without a Home: The National Youth Homelessness Survey
Without Land We are Lost: Traditional Knowledge, Digital Technology and Power Relations
[Witness Blanket by Cary Newman ; We are On Treaty Land assembled by Jaimie Isaac
Witnessing Painful Pasts: Understanding Images of Sports at Canadian Indian Residential Schools
Witnessing the Unspoken Truth: On Residential School Survivors' Testimonies in Canada
Wm. Scott and T. Pike in front of Humboldt Telegraph Station
Wokiksuye: The Politics of Memory in Indigenous Art, Monuments, and Public Space
“Women and 2spirits”: On the Marginalization of Transgender Indigenous People in Activist Rhetoric
Women and Indigenous Technology
Women Finding the Way: American Indian Women Leading Intervention Research in Native Communities
Women in Northern Paiute Politics
Women's Business: Report of the Aboriginal Women's Task Force
Women's Economic, Social and Cultural Rights in Canada: 2006-2015
Women's Narratives from the St. John's Native Friendship Centre: Digital Storytelling to Inform Community-based Healing and Violence Prevention Programs: Final Report
The Women's National Indian Association: A History
Book review of: The Women's National Indian Association: A History edited by Valerie Sherer Mathes.
The Women's National Indian Association: A History
Women's Specialist Domestic and Family Violence Services: Their Responses and Practices with and for Aboriginal Women: Final Report
Women's Talk: Conversations about Pregnancy, Birth, Motherhood and Community
Women Who Refused to Marry: A Jungian Interpretation of Selected Inuit Folktales
Wooden Artifacts from Asx̂aana x̂ Cave, Islands of the Four Mountains, Alaska
Woodland Traditional
Woodland Word Warrior: An Introduction to the Works of Gerald Vizenor
Wôpanãak Language Reclamation Project: Bringing the Language Home
Woppaburra: Past and Present
"Words Have Consequences": Reconstructing and Implementing Elizabeth Cook-Lynn's Nation-Centered Literary Theory
Work 2 Give: Fostering Collective Citizenship through Artistic and Healing Spaces for Indigenous Inmates and Communities in British Columbia
Work, Discipline and Conflict in the Hudson's Bay Company, 1770 to 1870
History Thesis (PhD) -- University of Manitoba, 1993.
Working Alliance and Its Relationship With Treatment Outcome in a Sample of Aboriginal and Non-Aboriginal Sexual Offenders
Working Group on Indigenous Populations, Eleventh Session, July 1993: Statement by the Observer Delegation of Canada Delivered by Gerald E. Shannon
Working on the Margins: A Labour History of the Native Peoples of Northern Labrador
Working Together: Indigenous Recruitment and Retention in Remote Canada
Working with Non-Indigenous Colleagues: Coping Mechanisms for Māori Social Workers
Examines the relationships and challenges for Māori social workers working with non-Māori social workers as well as suggesting ‘coping mechanisms’ when dealing with miscommunication and cultural misunderstandings in the workplace. To view article scroll down to page 71.
Workmanship and Relationships: Indigenous Food Trading and Sharing Practices on Vancouver Island
Workplace RAP Barometer 2016
The World Council of Indigenous Peoples: An Analysis of Political Protest
Worlded Object and Its Presentation: A Maori Philosophy of Language
Would Program Performance Indicators and a Nationally Coordinated Response Accelerate the Elimination of Tuberculosis Canada?
Wounded Carried to the Rear from the Fight at Fish Creek - Sketch. - 16 May 1885
The WoW Gathering: A Land-Based Positive Action Initiative to Support Indigenous People Living with HIV
Discusses the Weaving our Wisdom (WoW) program's use of land as a healing tool to improve the health of Indigenous people living with HIV and AIDS. The land-based WoW gathering took place at the Wanuskewin Heritage Site.