Visitors examine teepees
"Vitalizing the Things of the Past": Museum Representations of Native North American Art in the 1990s
Voices of the Land: Indigenous Design and Planning from the Prairies
Voices of the Plains Cree
Voyages of Peter Esprit Radisson, Being An Account of His Travels and Experiences Among the North American Indians, From 1652 to 1684
Wabaseemoong Community Case Study: Appropriate Education In A First Nations Reserve School
Wager Bay Oral History Project Interview Transcripts
Wáhta Teachings
Educational resource about the sugar maple combines traditional Indigenous Knowledge and plant science.
Related Material: Ziizibaakwadgummig: The Sugar Bush.
Waiting to Connect: The Expert Panel on High-Throughput Networks
for Rural and Remote Communities in Canada
Walking on Our Lands Again: Turning to Culturally Important Plants and Indigenous Conceptualizations of Health in a Time of Cultural and Political Resurgence
Examines the role of ethnobotany in decolonization.
Walking Through a Broken Mirror: A Way to Understand and Challenge the Fractured View of the Indigenous World Through Western Cultural Productions
Wanderers in Eden: Thomas Mitchell Compared With Lewis and Clark
Wanuskewin Heritage Park: Understanding the Cultural Legacy of the Northern Plains Indians
Wanuskewin Indian Heritage Park Grand Opening
War, Wampum, and Recognition: Algonquin Transborder Political Activism during the Early Twentieth Century, 1919-1931
Warriors for a Nation: The American Indian Movement, Indigenous Men, and Nation Building at the Takeover of Wounded Knee in 1973
Warriors of Justice and Healing
The Washita
Watching the Skies: An Overview of Indigenous Astronomy Curricula for Canadian K-12 Teachers
After review of existing literature authors conducted systematic survey of electronic curricular resources pertinent to the Ontario context and readily available to educators. Google, YouTube and university databases were searched. Eighty-two sources were identified, 60% of which were by an Indigenous author/partner/illustrator.
We Are Calling to You: Alaska's Missing and Murdered Indigenous Womxn and Girls
"We Are Not Beggars": Political Genesis of the Native Brotherhood, 1931-1951
We Are the Future: A Native Youth Narrative
"We Begin This Work to Call Together Witnesses": The Memory of the Second World War in Stó:Ló Communities, 1993-1995
"We Have Always Been the Frontier": The American Revolution in Shawnee Country
We, I, "Voice," and Voices: Reading Contemporary Native
American Poetry
“We’re Not Going to Stop for Anything": Concerned Aboriginal Women and the Constitution Express
"We still need the game. As Indigenous people, it's in our blood." A Conversation on Hockey, Residential School, and Decolonization.
"We've Always Done it. Country is Our Counselling Office.": Masculinity, Nature-Based Therapy, and the Strengths of Aboriginal Men
Social Sciences Dissertation (PhD)--University of Tasmania, 2021.
Weaving the Story: Northern Paiute Myth and Mary Austin's The Basket Woman
Weesageechak Begins to Dance: Native Earth Performing Arts Inc.
Welcoming and Navigating Allyship in Indigenous Communities
Well Beaten Paths: Aborigines of the Herbert-Burdekin District, North Queensland: An Ethnographic and Archaeological Study
The Wellbeing of Māori Pre and Post Covid-19 Lockdown in Aotearoa / New Zealand
Reports results of the Te Rangahau o Te Tuakiri Māori me Ngā Waiaro ā-Pūtea/The Māori Identity and Financial Attitudes Study (MIFAS) conducted between April and November, 2020. A total of 3,116 Māori responded.
Wellbeing of Māori Pre and Post COVID-19 Lockdown in Aoteraroa/New Zealand
Western Monkeys, Eastern Coyotes: Trickster Strategies in Resistance
Whakatika: A Survey of Māori Experiences of Racism
Whakatika: How Does Racism Impact on the Health of Black, Indigenous and/or People of Colour Globally: an International Literature Review for the Whakatika Research Project
Whakatika: How Does Racism Impact on the Health of Māori: a National Literature Review for the Whakatika Research Project
What is a Narwhal Worth? An Analysis of Factors Driving the Narwhal Hunt and a Critique of Tried Approaches to Hunt Management for Species Conservation
What Native Looks Like Now: Embodiment in Contemporary Indigenous Art, 1992–Present
History of Art and Architecture Thesis (PhD) -- University of Pittsburgh, 2021.
“What’s on the earth is in the stars; and what’s in the stars is on the earth”: Lakota Relationships with the Stars and American Relationships with the Apocalypse
What We Heard: Indigenous Peoples and COVID-19
"Wheeler, Arthur O."
"When are You Leaving?" Search for an Appropriate Research Methodology for Work With Aboriginal Peoples
When Black Lives Matter Meets Indian Country: Using the Cherokee and Chickasaw Nations as Case Studies for Understanding the Evolution of Public History and Interracial Coalition
When Do Fiduciary Obligations to Aboriginal People Arise?
When States' Attorneys General Write Books on Native American Law: A Case Study of Spaeth's American Indian Law Deskbook
When the North Was Red: Aboriginal Education in Soviet Siberia
"When Willow Roots Start to Thaw, People Come Back to Life...": Relations of Chukchi Reindeer Herders to Plants
Examines the relationship between reindeer herders and ethnobotany.