Where is Here?
Using their own personal reflections the author looks at Ontario Indigenous land claims and its impact into modern times.
[Where the Blood Mixes]
Where the Blood Mixes by Kevin Loring: Study Guide
Whispers of the Ancients: Native Tales for Teaching and Healing in Our Time
White Cap, Sioux Chief
White Eyes' Lies and the Battle for Dzil Nchaa Si'an
White Lies About the Inuit
White Man's Club: Schools, Race, and the Struggle of Indian Acculturation
White Man's Club: Schools, Race, and the Struggle of Indian Acculturation
White Mother to a Dark Race: Settler Colonialism, Maternalism, and the Removal of Indigenous Children in the American West and Australia, 1880-1940
The White of the Wampum: Possibilities for Indigenous-non-Indigenous Relationships in Canadian Settler Narratives (circa 2012) and Indigenous Storywork
Linguistics Thesis (PhD) -- Carleton University, 2020.
White Picket Fences: Whiteness, Urban Aboriginal Women and Housing Market Discrimination in Kelowna, British Columbia
White Shadows: The Use of Doppelgangers in Sherman Alexie’s Reservation Blues
The White Stone Canoe: A Legend of the Ottawas
The Whiteman's Aborigine
Who and What Is a Canadian Indian? The Impact of Bill C-31 Upon Demographic and Epidemiologic Measures of the Registered Indian Population of Manitoba
Who Lived In This House? A Study Of Koyukuk River Semisubterranean Houses
Who's Afraid of Kaassassuk? Writing as a Tool in Coping with Changing Cosmology
Who Shot the Sheriff: Storytelling, Indian Identity, and the Marketplace of Masculinity in D'Arcy Mcnickle's The Surrounded
Who Speaks for Indigenous Peoples? Tribal Journalists, Rhetorical Sovereignty, and Freedom of Expression
Who We Are Is Where We Come From: A Historical Curriculum Resource For The Pic Mobert First Nation
Whose “Distinctive Culture”?: Aboriginal Feminism and R. v. Van der Peet
Whose Home on the Range? Finding Room for Native Americans, African Americans, and Latino Americans in the Revisionist Western
Whose Land Is It? Rethinking Sovereignty in British Columbia
Whose Voices Count? Oral Sources and Twentieth-Century American Indian History
Why Are We Settling? Indigenous Cultural Safety Education for Counsellors in Ontario
Kinesiology Thesis (PhD) -- Queen's University, 2020.
Why Didn't You Listen: White Noise and Black History
Why Do Indigenous Students Succeed at University?
Why Is Adoption Like a First Nations’ Feast?: Lax Kw’alaam Indigenizing Adoptions in Child Welfare
Why Make Movies?: Some Atikamekw Answers
Why Native Literature?
Why No Iroquois Fiction?
Why Privatization of Reserve Lands Risks Aboriginal Ruin
Argues that the proposal by the federal government to privatize reserve lands is short sighted and not for the greater good of the Aboriginal population.
Entire issue on one pdf. To access article scroll to p.12.
Why the 90s Were so Sexy: Locating Sexuality, Pleasure and Desire in Work Produced by Indigenous Women Identified Artists During the 1990s and Early 2000s in Canada
Art History Major Research Paper (M.A) -- Ontario College of Art & Design University, 2020.
Why the World Needs to Watch: The Canadian Government Held to Account for Racial Discrimination Against Indigenous Children before the Canadian Human Rights Tribunal
WhyKwit: A Qualitative Study of What Motivated Māori, Pacific Island and Low Socio-economic Peoples in Aotearoa/New Zealand to Stop Smoking
Wicihitowin: Aboriginal Social Work in Canada
Wîhtikow Feast: Digesting Layers of Memory and Myth in Highway's Kiss of the Fur Queen and McLeod's Sons of a Lost River
Wii Niiganabying (Looking Ahead): Rearticulating Indigenous Control of Education
Wiisaakodewininiwag ga-nanaakonaawaad: Jiibe-Giizhikwe, Racial Homeopathy, and "Eastern Metis" Identity Claims
Evaluation of Dr. Sebastien Malette and Guilliaume Marcotte's article and testimony regarding Marie-Louise Riel being Louis Riel's aunt. The two were expert witnesses in two courts cases regarding the claim of a historical Métis community in eastern Canada.
Wilderness Cure: An Exploration of The Blue Jay's Dance, Pilgrim at Tinker Creek, and Refuge
[Will Truth Bring Reconciliation?]
William Apess and Sherman Alexie: Imagining Indianness in (Non)Fiction
William Bleasdell Cameron and Horse Child
Historical note:
William McLennan, 4 October 1948-3 July 2020. Curator Emeritus, Museum of Anthropology at UBC, Vancouver
Winding Through the Milky Way (Song)
Windspeaker News Briefs
Outlines six stories including: flooding and a mudslide in the community of Tsawataineuk First Nation, tropical storm Earl uncovers First Nations artifacts in New Brunswick, questions about gun registry violating treaty rights and more.
Entire issue on one pdf. To access article scroll to p.9.
Windspeaker News Briefs
Outlines three stories: an agreement with Brokenhead Ojibway Nation's chief and Manitoba's minister of conservation to protect petroform sites, an outcry for a public inquiry into the murders of convicted killer Robert Pickton and a request for a ban on the bulldozing of important Native sites without the consent of Ontario First Nations people.
Entire issue on one pdf. To access article scroll to p.9.
Windspeaker Sports Briefs
Highlights a pilot program called P.L.A.Y. (Promoting Lifeskills for Aboriginal Youth), a new coach for the Akwesasne Warriors, Aboriginal inductees to the Ontario Lacrosse Hall of Fame, and the uncertain future of Wade Redden of the New York Rangers.
Entire issue on one pdf. To access article scroll to p.17.