What Is It About Us That You Don't Like?
What Is Whānau Research in the Context of Marae/ Hapū-based Archives?: A Literature Review for the Whakamanu Research Project
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's Wrong With a Little Fantasy? : Storytelling From the (Still) Ivory Tower
What Treaty Eight Actually Says
What You Pawn I Will Redeem
"When a Lapp is Out on the High Fells": Literary Voice and Cultural Identity for the Sámi
When All the Cowboys Are Indians: The Nature of Race in All-Indian Rodeo
"When the Caribou Failed": Ilia Tolstoy in the Barren Lands, 1928-1929
When the City Sleeps, We Dream of Disruption: A Review of Lisa Jackson's Transmissions Exhibition
"When the Time Comes": A Guide for End-of-Life Planning for Indigenous People
Topics include cultural protocols, directions for care, services and burial, giving possessions, coping with grief, legal implications, and sensitive or difficult situations.
When Your Child Is Sick
Where Are All The Native Grads
Examines the factors affecting education of Aboriginal youth, creating graduation rates that lag behind that of their non-Aboriginal classmates.
Entire issue on one pdf. To access article scroll to p.44.
"Where Are the Children?" - An Exhibition Launch: A Speech, Delivered by Georges Erasmus, President, The Aboriginal Healing Foundation
Where are the Fish? Using a “Fish as Food” Framework to Explore the Thunder Bay Area Fisheries
Where are you from? Reframing Facilitated Admissions Policies in the Faculty of Health Sciences
Where is Here?
Using their own personal reflections the author looks at Ontario Indigenous land claims and its impact into modern times.
Where the Partridge Drums
Whispered Gently through Time: First Nations Qualilty Child Care
The White Father: Denial, Paternalism and Community
White Nationalism and Native Cultures
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 Robe’s Dilemma: Tribal History In American Literature. Neil Schmitz.
The Whitewashing of Native Studies Programs and Programming in Academic Institutions
Who Cares About the Facts?
Who Defines Success: An Analysis of Competing Models of Education for American Indian and Alaskan Native Students
Who is Indigenous? 'Peoplehood' and Ethnonationalist Approaches to Rearticulating Indigenous Identity
Who Supports Urban American Indian Students in Public Community Colleges?
The Whole Past in a Yavapai Mythology
Whose Bones Are They?
Whose Land Is It? Rethinking Sovereignty in British Columbia
Whose Story Is It, Anyway? Or ... Power and Difference in The Book of Jessica: Implications for Theories of Collaboration
Why Aboriginal Self-Government?
Why Are We Settling? Indigenous Cultural Safety Education for Counsellors in Ontario
Kinesiology Thesis (PhD) -- Queen's University, 2020.
Why Bluejay Hops
Children's book retells the Skokomish traditional story. Suitable for use with Grades K-5.
Related Material: Lesson Plan.
Why Did Charlie Wenjack Die?
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.
Wife, Mother, Provider, Defender, God: Women in Lakota Winter Counts
An historical perspective on gender in relation to waniyetu wowakapi (winter counts) or hekta yawap. reveals evidence of women's roles; author suggests further historical research.
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.