Canadian Illustrated News: Images in the News: 1869-1883
Canadian Indian/Native Studies Association: Announcement
Canadian Inuit History: A Thousand-year Odyssey
Chronicles the history of the Inuit people from their origins, in the prehistoric period, through to European contact and the formation of Nunavut. The article also discusses Inuit possibilities for the future.
Canadian Journal of Native Studies. Special Issue. Vol.3 no.2 1983: Introduction
Canadian Nuclear Fuel Waste: Current Contexts and Future Management Prospects
Canadian Resource Co-Management Boards and Their Relationship to Indigenous Knowledge: Two Case Studies
The Canadian West
Canaries in the Mines of Citizenship: Indian Women in Canada
Cancer in Greenlandic Inuit 1973-1997
Cancer in North American Indians: Environment Versus Heredity
Cancer Surveillance in a Remote Indian Population in Northwestern Ontario
The CANDO [Council for the Advancement of Native Development Officers] Economic Developer of the Year Award
Canned and Labelled: Case Closed
Comments on government and church reaction to abuse allegations at Aboriginal residential schools in Ottawa, Ontario.
Entire issue on one pdf. To access article scroll to p.3.
Canonizing Craig Womack: Finding Native Literature's Place in Indian Country
The Canton Asylum: Indians, Psychiatrists, and Government Policy, 1899-1934
Capital Project Management, Construction Management and Organization for Blue Quills First Nations College
Capping the Inuktitut Formal Education System
The Captive White Woman of Gippsland: In Pursuit of the Legend
The Captors' Narrative: Catholic Women and Their Puritan Men on the Early American Frontier
Capturing Value From Science: Exploring the Interface Between Science and Indigenous Knowledge
Cardiovascular and Respiratory Health Risks in Canada's Aboriginal Population
Cariboo Still Talking Terms With Ottawa
Cariboo Winding Up Affairs
Caribou Mountains Critical Wildlife Habitat and Traditional Ecological Knowledge Study
Caribou, River and Ocean: Harvaqtuurmiut Landscape Organization and Orientation
Carving Self-Identity: Hopi Katsina Dolls as Contemporary Cultural Expression
The Case for Change: a Review of Contemporary Research on Indigenous Education Outcomes
A Case Study of Integrating Inuuqatigiit into a Nunavut Junior High School Classroom
A Case Study of Interorganizational Collaboration: Developing Culturally Appropriate Health and Social Services for Aboriginal Seniors in Winnipeg, Manitoba, Canada
Case Study Report: Big Cove Youth Intervention Project (Youth Initiative)
Case Study Report: Honouring Residential School Survivors: A Theatre Production: Every Warrior's Song
Case Study Report: I da wa da di
Case Study Report: Qul-Aun Program
Case Study Report: Two-Spirited Youth Program
Casinos No Answer to First Nations' Needs
The Cast[e]ing of Heroic Landscapes of Power: Constructing Canada's Pantheon on Parliament Hill
Cast in Print: The Nineteenth-Century Hawaiian Imaginary
The Catholic Missionaries as Agents Of Social Change Among The Métis And Indians Of Red River: 1818-1845
Catholicism in Louise Erdrich's Love Medicine and Tracks
Celluloid Indians: Native Americans and Film
Centre Takes the Frustration Out of Post-Secondary Blues
Focuses on the three week orientation program offered by the Aboriginal Student Centre and how the centre has helped students make a successful transition into the university community.
Entire issue on one pdf. To access article scroll to p.29.
A Cephalometric Analysis of a North American Indian Tribe: A Cross Sectional Study
Ceramics and Social Dynamics: Technological Style and Corrugated Ceramics During the Pueblo III to Pueblo IV Transition, Silver Creek, Arizona
Ceremonial Robes of the Montagnais-Naskapi
Ceremony in Miniature: Kiowa Oral Storytelling and Narrative Event
Cervical Cancer Screening in Ethnocultural Groups: Case Studies in Women-Centred Care
Chalifoux Educates Fellow Senators with Horror Stories
Senator and Metis leader, Thelma Chalifoux, believes that political lobby groups, like the Assembly of First Nations, should not take over social programs provided for First Nations because, as she argues, politics and patronage distort the system and erode the quality of the service.
Entire issue on one pdf. To access article scroll to p.10.