The Distribution of Alcohol Among the Natives of Russian America
Divergent Models of Diabetes Among American Indian Elders
Diversifying Aboriginal Forestry: Broad Directions
Divided We Fall: Cherokee Sovereignty and the Cost of Factionalism, 1827-1906
Division of Community Health Services: Community Report
Diyari Language Postcards and Diyari Literacy
Do American Indian Mascots = American Indian People? Examining Implicit Bias towards American Indian People and American Indian Mascots
Do No Further Harm: Becoming a White Ally in Child Welfare Work With Aboriginal Children, Families, and Communities
Do No Harm: Decolonising Aboriginal Health Research
Doctor, Lawyer, Indian Chief
Doctor to the North: Thirty Years of Treating Heart Disease Among the Inuit
The Doctrine of Discovery and Canadian Law
Document One: Memorandum for the Hon[uorable] the Indian Commissioner Relative to the Future Management of Indians
Memorandum written July 20, 1885 by Hayter Reed, Assistant Indian Commissioner to Indian Commissioner, Edgar Dewdney outlining policies appropriate to the post-rebellion era. The document is divided in two parts: on the right is text of the memorandum and on the left comments written by Edgard Dewdney.See also Document Two: Reply to the Above Memorandum
Document Two: Reply to the Above Memorandum
Documenting Ethnic Cleansing in North America: Creating Unseen Tears
Documenting First Nations Perspectives on Water: Engaging Fort William First Nation in Source Water Protection Using Photovoice
Documents of Native American Political Development: 1500s to 1933
Does Climate Change Redefine Sovereignty?
Does Living On-Reserve Versus Off-Reserve Make a Difference in First Nations Birth Outcomes in Manitoba, Canada
Does Pedometer Goal Setting Improve Physical Activity among Native Elders? Results from a Randomized Pilot Study
Dog Ear Cafe: How the Mt Theo Program Beat the Curse of Petrol Sniffing
Domestic Hunting and Fishing by Manitoba Indians: Magnitude Composition and Implications for Management
Domestic Violence in Aboriginal Communities: A Context for Resilience
Don Amero - [Windspeaker Confidential]
Interview with Métis acoustic musician Don Amero.
Entire issue on one pdf. To access article scroll to p.19.
"Don't Speak For Me": Practicing Oral History Amidst the Legacies of Conflict
Don't Think of Self-Government: The Debate Over Which Language Should Govern Aboriginal Peoples' Relationship With The State
Donald Marshall
Donald Thomson, the Man and Scholar
A Double-Bladed Knife: Subversive Laughter in Two Stories by Thomas King
Analysis of two short stories, Joe the Painter and the Deer Island Massacre and One Good Story, That One, commenting on King's use of irony and humor.
The Double Movements That Define Copyright Law and Ingenious Art in Australia
Doubleweaving Two-Spirit Critiques: Building Alliances between Native and Queer Studies
Doubting What the Elders Have to Say: A Critical Examination of Canadian Judicial Treatment of Aboriginal Oral History Evidence
Down in a Valley, Up on a Ridge: Applying a Case Repertoire to Advanced Telecommunications and Rural Developments
Dreaming With the Ancestors: Black Seminole Women in Texas and Mexico
The Dropout/Graduation Crisis Among American Indian and Alaska Native Students: Failure to Respond Places the Future of Native Peoples at Risk
Drug and HIV-Related Risk Behaviors After Geographic Migration Among a Cohort of Injection Drug Users
Drug Education For People Using Medicines
Dry Island Buffalo Jump Provincial Park and Area Tourism Development Plan
The Dualities of Endurance: A Collaborative Historical Archaeology of Ethnogenesis at Brothertown, 1780-1910
Due Diligence, or How I lost Ten Pounds
Duel at Ile-à-la’Crosse
Duty to Consult
The Duty to Consult Doctrine and Representative Structures for Consultation with Métis Communities and Non-Status Indian Communities
Analyzes implications of case law for off-reserve communities and for governments' interactions with them. Discusses the related issue of what forms of governance institutions and/or corporate organizations can pursue consultation on behalf of communities.