Struggle Continues for Jacobs Despite Personal Accomplishments
Brief profile of Beverley Jacobs, recipient of the Governor General's Award, who, as president of the Native Women’s Association of Canada campaigns to ensure Aboriginal women receive the same respect as non-Aboriginal women.
Entire issue on one pdf. To access article scroll to p.10.
The Struggle for Recognition: Part-Aborigines in Bass Strait in the Nineteenth Century
Struggle, Resistance, Liberation, and Theological Methodology: Indigenous Peoples and the Two-Thirds World
Struggling Over the Past: Decolonization and the Problem of History in Settler Societies - Volume One
Student Perceptions of Native American Student Affairs at the University of Arizona: What Can We Learn From the Population We Serve?
Student Snapshots: An Alternative Approach to the Visual History of American Indian Boarding Schools
Students Cooking Their Way into the Job Market
Discusses how, in an effort to improve the health and well-being of Aboriginals, Chef Andrew George revamped the employment training program in culinary arts.
Entire issue on one pdf. To access article scroll to p.17.
Students Design Project with Traditional Knowledge
Three recent teaching graduates of NORTEP advocate Aboriginal knowledge be added to the curriculum in Saskatchewan schools, focusing mainly on science.
Entire issue on one pdf. To access article scroll to p.30.
Students Experience Saskatchewan's Diversity First-Hand
Students Making a Difference
Students Meet the Plant Tribes
The Students of Sherman Indian School: Education and Native Identity Since 1892
Students On the Move: Ways to Address the Impact of Mobility Among Aboriginal Students
Students, Volunteers 'Dig' New University Gardens
Studies in the Literary Achievement of Louise Erdrich, Native American Writer: Fifteen Critical Essays
Study Finds Incompetence, Negligence - Dept's Operations In Total Disarray
Study Guide for "The Whole Country Was ... 'One Robe'": The Little Shell Tribe's America: A Montana Tribal Histories Project Book
To accompany book of the same title. The book integrates Canadian and American history of the groups which lived in the "borderlands", specifically members of Little Shell who were considered "Landless Indians" until 2019 when the tribe finally gained federal recognition in the United States.