Teaching Indigenous Languages
Teaching Indigenous Studies: Resource Guide
Teaching on Stolen Ground
Teaching Treaties: Treaty Abrogation and the Rule Against Perpetuities: Seventeen Quotations and Two Graphs to Get Students Talking
Teaching with and about the Ivory Art from Chukotka and the Bering Strait
Examines the contemporary practices of craving and engraving walrus ivory.
Teachings of the Seven Prophets: The Seven Fires
Team Saskatchewan Wins Fourth NAIG Title
Teasing Aside: LBHC Maintains Crow Language, Culture
Tech Anishinaabe Medicine Wheel: Decolonial Design Principles within Digital Technologies through the Development of the Indigenous Friends Platform
Communication and Culture Thesis (PhD) -- York University, 2021.
Technology, Ideology, and Emergent Communicative Practices Among the Navajo
"Tell Me a Woman's Story": The Question of Gender in the Construction of Waheenee, Pretty-Shield, and Papago Woman
Telling 1922s Story of a National Crime: Canada's First Chief Medical Officer and the Aborted Fight For Aboriginal Health Care
Telling about Bear in N. Scott Monaday's The Ancient Child
Telling and Retelling in the ‘Ink of Light’: Documentary Cinema, Oral Narratives, and Indigenous Identities
Telling Anishinaabe Women's Art: Piecing Together: No Stranger in the House
Telling Anishinaabe women's art: Piecing Together: No Stranger in the House [Speech by Alice Olsen Williams, Margaret Laurence Lecture at Trent University]
Telling Our Twisted Histories
Website contains links to a series of 12 podcasts which explore the impact of words such as reconciliation, indian time, school, reserve, and savage. Host Kaniehti:io Horn engages in conversations with more than 70 people from 15 First Nations, Inuit and Métis communities.
Telling Stories About Places for Sustainability: A Case Study of the Islands in the Salish Sea Community Mapping Project
Temporomandibular Disorders, Headaches, and Cervical Pain Among Females in a Sami Population
Ten Years of Aboriginal Head Start in the NWT: 1996 to 2006
Ten Years of Collecting 1987-1997 - Catalogue.
The Tender and Brave Heart of a Warrior Woman
Discusses achievements of Metis broadcaster and businesswoman Suzanne Rochon-Burnett, the first woman inducted into the Canadian Council of Aboriginal Business Hall of Fame.
Entire issue on one pdf. To access article scroll to p.21.
Tensions in Fostering ‘local food’ in the Northwest Territories: Contending with Settler Colonialism in Northern Research
Political Economy Thesis (MA) -- Carleton University, 2021.
Tensions of Empire: Colonial Cultures in a Bourgeois World
Termination by Decentralization? Native American Responses to Federal Regional Councils, 1969-1983
Testing the Reliability of a Measure of Aboriginal Children's Mental Health: An Analysis Based on the Western Australian Aboriginal Child Health Survey
Tewahia : ton Tipaacimowin -- Two Stories Seen Intertribally: The First Novels of Ruby Slipperjack and Thomas King
Textiles Used by Native Americans
"That Is What I Said To Him": American Women's Narratives About Indians, 1879-1934
That the People Might Live: Native American Literatures and Native American Community
Theatre Co. Labour of Love: SNTC Does Much More Than Produce Plays
A Theatrical Exploration in Healing: Running Through The Devil's Club, A Women-Centred Drama About Surviving Sexual Abuse and Assault (1994-97)
"Their Works Do Follow Them": Tlingit Women and Presbyterian Missions
Theories of Intelligence, Goal Orientation, and Self-Efficacy: Examining Vulnerability to Depression in Native American Children and Adolescents
The Theory and Practice of Sentencing: Are They on the Same Wavelength? [Part One]
"There is a Right Way"
There Is No Vaccine for Stigma: A Rapid Evidence Review of Stigma Mitigation Strategies During Past Outbreaks among Indigenous Populations Living in Rural, Remote and Northern Regions of Canada and What Can Be Learned For COVID-19
"There Was More to It, but That Is All I Can Remember": The Persistence of History and the Autobiography of Delfina Cuero
"There Were Vegetables Every Year Mr Green Was Here": Right Behaviour and the Struggle for Autonomy at Coranderrk Aboriginal Reserve
Thèses / Dissertations
"They Drink Because They Don't Have Money, and They Don't Have Money Because They Drink": Relation to Alcohol and Money Within a Chukotkan Village
Outlines the relationship between alcohol and money as a cultural and social framework in Chukotkan villages.