What is Authentic and Meaningful Compensation in the Eyes of Indigenous Peoples?
What Ma Lach’s Bones Tell Us: Performances of Relational Materiality in Response to Genocide
What Makes Us Strong: Urban Aboriginal Perspectives on Wellness and Strength
What's Law Got to Do With It? The Protection of Aboriginal Title in Canada
What's the Harm? Examining the Stereotyping of Indigenous Peoples in Health Systems
Education Thesis (DEd) -- Simon Fraser University, 2018.
What "Violent Violets" Want: Female Desire in Contemporary Women's Fiction
What We Were Told: Responses to “65,000 Years of Aboriginal History”
What Would It Take?: Youth Across Canada Speak Out on Youth Homelessness Prevention
Whatever Happened to the Kanakas?
"Wheeler, Arthur O."
"When I Am Lonely the Mountains Call Me": The Impact of Sacred Geography on Navajo Psychological Well Being
When Our Words Return: Writing, Hearing, and Remembering Oral Traditions of Alaska and the Yukon
When the Earth Shakes: A Status Report on Dissertation Research Regarding Mexican Volcanoes
When White People Talk About Their Country Being Stolen (I Throw Up in My Mouth a Little Bit)
Where Do Policy Makers And Politicians Look For Policy Directions?
Where My edhéhke Take Me In Reimagining Curriculum: A Narrative Inquiry into the Experiences of Dene Learning From/With the Land
Education Thesis (EdD) - University of Alberta, 2022.
White Backlash against Indigenous Peoples in Canada
White Cap, Sioux Chief
White Eyes' Lies and the Battle for Dzil Nchaa Si'an
White Shadows: The Use of Doppelgangers in Sherman Alexie’s Reservation Blues
The White Stone Canoe: A Legend of the Ottawas
The White Woman’s Indian: Laura Gilpin in the American Southwest
[Whitehorse Point-in-Time Count] 2018 Report
“Whitman’s Song Sung the Navajo Way”
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 Gets to Tell the Stories? Carlisle Indian School: Imagining a Place of Memory Through Descendant Voices
Examines boarding school through the lenses of the student's descendants recollections of their families experiences. Through these means the stories will continued to be told once there are no more living alumni.
Who Is Research Serving? A Systematic Realist Review of Circumpolar Environment-Related Indigenous Health Literature
Who Lived In This House? A Study Of Koyukuk River Semisubterranean Houses
Who Shot the Sheriff: Storytelling, Indian Identity, and the Marketplace of Masculinity in D'Arcy Mcnickle's The Surrounded
A “Whole-Community” Approach for Sustainable Digital Infrastructure in Remote and Northern First Nations
Whose Home on the Range? Finding Room for Native Americans, African Americans, and Latino Americans in the Revisionist Western
Whose Voices Count? Oral Sources and Twentieth-Century American Indian History
Whose Water Is It Anyway? Indigenous Water Sovereignty in Canada: An Indigenous Resurgence Analysis of the Case of Halalt First Nation v British Columbia
Why are Indigenous Affairs Policies Framed in ways that Undermine Indigenous Health and Equity?
Examines how the framing of speeches by three different political groups impact Indigenous populations access to health equity.
Why Indigenous Literatures Matter
Why Native Literature?
Why No Iroquois Fiction?
Widening the Circle of Care: Digital Stories of Community-Based Caregiving in a Mohawk First Nation
Using digital storytelling to identify the importance of cultural identity for the care-giving of those living cancer within the Mohawk Nation of Kahnawake.
Wiijijiibaakwemaadaa Gookum [Let's Cook with Grandma]
Colouring book created for Ojibwe language immersion program. Text in Ojibwe with Ojibwe-English glossary.
Wiingushk Okaadenige (Sweetgrass Braid): A Braided Approach to Indigenous Youth Mental Health Support during COVID-19
Discusses a braid approach intervention, a combination of different Indigenous practices, as ways to address the needs of Indigenous youth suffering from mental health issues.
Wild Card: Making Sense of Adoption and Indigenous Citizenship Orders in Settler Colonial Contexts
Foreword to Special Issue on Adoption and Indigenous Citizenship Orders highlights the topics, authors and social contexts to be covered in the issue.
Wilderness Cure: An Exploration of The Blue Jay's Dance, Pilgrim at Tinker Creek, and Refuge
“William Apess Was Born Here”: Marking William Apess on the Geographical and Cultural Map
William Bleasdell Cameron and Horse Child
Historical note:
Winnipeg Cavalry at Fort Qu'Appelle, North-West Rebellion, 1885
The "Winters" Doctrine: Origin and Development of the Indian Reserved Water Rights Doctrine in its Social and Legal Context, 1880s-1930s
History Thesis (Ph.D.)--University of Oregon, 1997