"What and Who Is Two-Spirit" in Health Research
"What Comes After Newawl": When Generalization Disrupts Experience in Mathematics
Discusses the difference between Indigenous and Western education based on personal experiences of the learner.
What Do Indigenous Education Policy Frameworks Reveal about Commitments to Reconciliation in Canadian School Systems?
What Do the Stories of Indigenous Youth Reveal About Their Educational Experiences?
Education Thesis (PhD) -- Walden University, 2020.
What Happened in Black Africa: Part II
What Happened to the Iroquois Clans?: A Study of Clans in Three Nineteenth Century Rotinonhsyonni Communities
What is an Elder? What Do Elders Do?: First Nations Elders As Teachers in Culture-Based Urban Organizations
What is Bill-31 and Bill-3?
What Is Whānau Research in the Context of Marae/ Hapū-based Archives?: A Literature Review for the Whakamanu Research Project
What Parliament Heard About Aboriginal Health Workers
What Protects Youth From Getting into Bad Habits: A Mistissini Community Study
What's the Most Beautiful Thing You Know about Horses?
What the Grandchildren Learned: The Relationship Between English and Indigenous Languages in North American Indian Autobiography
When Coyote Meets Adam: Or Thomas King's New Space
When Critical Approaches Converge: Team-Teaching Welch’s Winter in the Blood
When the Animals Still Danced: Animal Images in Mimbres Pottery and Petroglyphs
When the City Sleeps, We Dream of Disruption: A Review of Lisa Jackson's Transmissions Exhibition
When The Dust Settles: A Case Study of the Effects of the Native American Graves Protection and Repatriation Act on a National Park Service Repository
"When the Stories Disappear, Our People Will Disappear": Notes on Language and Contemporary Literature of the Saskatchewan Plains Cree and Métis
"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 the World Began: [A Yukon Teacher's Guide to Comparative and Local Mythology]
When Words are Returned: Approaching Traditional and Contemporary Oral Narrative Integration in Whitehorse Primary Curriculum
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 in the World Does Obsidian Hydration Dating Work?
Where is Here?
Using their own personal reflections the author looks at Ontario Indigenous land claims and its impact into modern times.
‘Where's the Beef?‘: Cattle Killing, Rations Policy and First Nations ‘Criminality’ in Southern Alberta, 1892–1895
Where Sea and Land Meet: Historical Northwest Coast Native Settings in the Art of Gordon Miller and Bill Holm
White by Definition: Status, Identity and Aboriginal Rights
Examines the issue of Aboriginal identification and inherent rights of Aboriginal peoples, and looks at how government policies fail to meet the concerns of specific groups. Uses case study of Ardoch Algonquin First Nation.
White Flour, White Power: From Rations to Civilization in Central Australia
A White Light: A Remarkable Series of Videos Recreating Inuit Stories from Canada's Arctic Makes Its Way from Igloolik to France's Newest High-Tech Art Centre
White Man's Law: Native People in Nineteenth-Century Canadian Jurisprudence
White Man's Way Won't Do: Native Women Critical of Closed-Door Process for Self-Government
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, Stereotypes of Indians
Who is on Trial? Teme-Augama Anishnabai Land Rights and George Ironside, Junior: Re-Considering Oral Tradition
Whose Face Anyway?: Images of First Nations Protest and Resistance in Kahnawake and Kanesatake, Kanien'kehaka Territory 1990, a Study in the Social Construction of Voice and Image
Whose Hero?: Images of Louis Riel in Contemporary Art and Métis Nationhood
Whose Land Is It? Rethinking Sovereignty in British Columbia
Why Anthropologists Study Human Remains
Why Are We Settling? Indigenous Cultural Safety Education for Counsellors in Ontario
Kinesiology Thesis (PhD) -- Queen's University, 2020.
Why Have I Not Forgotten My Language: A Yowlumne Language Autobiography
Why Indian People Should be the Ones to Write About Indian Education
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.
Why We Play Basketball
Widening the Circle: Collaborative Research for Mental Health Promotion in Native Communities
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.