“We Are Not Privileged Enough to Have That Foundation of Language”: Pasifika Young Adults Share their Deep Concerns about the Decline of the Ancestral/Heritage Languages in Aotearoa New Zealand
We Are Your Children, We Are Your Future: Developing Indigenous-Centred Parenting Support for Children with Mild to Moderate Anxiety
"We Beg the Government": Native People and Game Regulation in Northern Saskatchewan, 1900-1940
We Belong to the Land: Native Americans Experiencing and Coping with Racial Microagressions
We Can Do Better: Housing in Inuit Nunangat
We Can Do Better: Housing in Inuit Nunangat: Report of the Standing Senate Committee on Aboriginal Peoples
'We do not want one who is too old': Aboriginal Child Domestic Servants in Late 19th and Early 20th Century Queensland
“We Don’t Drink the Water Here”: The Reproduction of Undrinkable Water for First Nations in Canada
"We get our education from the land": Student Perspectives of Indigenous Food Sovereignty
Health Thesis (MA) -- Dalhousie University, 2019
"We Have Bigotry All Right—but No Alabamas": Racism and Aboriginal Protest in Canada during the 1960s
We Interrupt This Program: Indigenous Media Tactics in Canadian Culture
"We Lived It": Stories of Cultural Resilience, Dinék'ehgo Nanitiin (Diné-Based Instruction), and Navigating Between University and Tribal Institutional Review Boards
"We Must Teach the Indian What Law Is": The Laws of Indian Residential Schools in Canada
Chronology of the laws that created and enforced Indian Residential Schools.
“We Need New Stories”: Trauma, Storytelling, and the Mapping of Environmental Injustice in Linda Hogan’s Solar Storms and Standing Rock
"We're Gonna Capture Johnny Depp": Making Kin with Cinematic Comanches
"We're Rapping, Not Trapping": Hip Hop as a Contemporary Expression of Métis Culture and a Conduit to Literacy
"We See Hard Times Ahead of Us": York Factory and Indigenous Life in the Western Hudson Bay Region, 1880-1925
We Shall Remember: Canadian Indians and World War II
We Still Tell Stories: An Examination of Cherokee Oral Literature
Weaving and Baking Nation: The Recognition Politics of the Métis Sash and Bannock in the 1990s
History Thesis (M.A.)--University of British Columbia, 2019.
Looks at the Oral History Project of the Métis Women of Manitoba Inc.
Weaving Intersectional Rhetoric: The Digital Counternarratives of Indigenous Feminist Bloggers
Weaving Math
Uses techniques involved in creating a Coast Salish blanket to teach concepts of slope and equations in Grade 10 Mathematics Curriculum.
Weaving Tapestries of Solidarity With Virtual Thread: Information and Communication Technologies at the Service of Grassroots Indigenous Women in Bolivia
Weekend in Palm Springs Surreal Experience
Weight among Children Born 2005-2011 in Nuuk at the Time of School Entry
"A Weird and Waning Race": Representations of Native People in the Works of Duncan Campbell Scott
Welcoming Churches Embrace Old and New
Well-Being and Resiliency:The miyo Resource kâ-nâkatohkêhk
miyo-ohpikinawâwasowin: Incorporating an Indigenous Worldview into Prevention and Early Intervention Programming and Evaluation
["Well, I heard it on the radio and I saw it on the television ... ": An Essay for the Australian Film Commission on the Politics and Aesthetics of Filmmaking by and about Aboriginal People and Things]
Wellness Interventions for Indigenous Communities in the United States: Examplars for Action Research
Westbank First Nation Self-Government Agreement between Her Majesty the Queen in Right of Canada and Westbank First Nation
Western Apache Oral Histories and Traditions of the Camp Grant Massacre
Western Canadian Fur Trade Sites and the Iconography of Public Memory
Wet’suwet’en Unlocking Aboriginal Justice
Whakatipu Rawa Ma Ngā Uri Whakatipu: Optimising the "Māori" in Economic Development
Whakawātea Te Huarahi Whāia Te Mātauranga: Legitimising Space for Meaningful Academic Careers for Māori in Business Schools
Whaling and Eskimos: Hudson Bay 1860-1951
Whānau Hauā: Reframing Disability from an Indigenous Perspective
What About Our Problem Children?
What Came Out of the Takeovers: Women's Activism and the Indian Community School of Milwaukee
What Does Ainu Cultural Revitalisation Mean to Ainu and Wajin Youth in the 21st Century? Case Study of Urespa as a Place to Learn Ainu Culture in the City of Sapporo, Japan
What Douglas Students Know About Indigenous Realities in Canada
Survey of 479 first-term students conducted in the fall 2018 consisted of both multiple-choice and open-ended questions concerning current events, history, culture, geography and governance.
What Happens After the Traditional Knowledge Study? Some Issues to Consider About Ownership and Confidentiality
What Is It About Us That You Don't Like?
What It Takes to Support a Loved One with FASD: A Photovoice Project for the CanFASD Research Network Family Advisory Committee
What Kind of Abuse at Residential Schools?
What Makes Anti-Racist Pedagogy in Teacher Education Difficult? Three Popular Ideological Assumptions
What Makes First Nations Enterprises Successful?:
Lessons from the Harvard Project
What Queen's Students Know about Indigenous Realities in Canada
Survey of 844 exiting-year students from across 5 faculties and 20 disciplines was conducted from December 2017 to April 2018 consisted of both multiple-choice and open-ended questions.