Homecoming for the Totem Poles
Homeless Indigenous Veterans and the Current Gap in Knowledge: The State of the Literature
Homelessness
Dupuis
Homesteads on the Purgatoire: Frontiers of Culture Contact in 19th Century Colorado
Homicide and Indigenous peoples in North America: A structural analysis
Honorary Medical Editorial...
Honour of the Crown
Honoured Indian Refused Service!!
Honouring Indigenous Science as a Means of Ensuring Scientific Responsibility
Honouring Lives: Final Report
Honouring Our Ancestors by Trailblazing a Path to the Future: Interim Report of the Joint Advisory Committee on Fiscal Relations: For Engagement Purposes
Honouring Sacred Relationships: Wise Practices in Indigenous Social Work
Hopi Hova: Anthropological Assumptions of Gendered Otherness in Native American Societies
Horizontal Audit on Indigenous Employment in the Banking and Financial Sector
Horizontal Inter-Ethnic Relations: Chinese and American Indians in the Nineteenth-Century American West
Hospitalisation Patterns of Australia's Aboriginal Population and their Implication
Hospitalised Injury among Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander People: 2011-12 to 2015-16
Hospitalizations For Injury Among American Indian Youth in Washington
Hot Lunch Program One of Many Services to Community
Brief profile of Elder Theresa Stevenson, recipient of the National Aboriginal Achievement Award for Community Development. Theresa is recognized for her devotion to humanitarian causes such as advocating for Aboriginal role models in schools, hot lunch programs, and low income housing.
Entire issue on one pdf. To access article scroll to p.33.
House Made of Dawn: A Positively Ambivalent Bildungsroman
House of Difference: Cultural Politics and National Identity in Canada
The Housing Conditions of Off-Reserve Aboriginal Households
Housing in Nunavik: Information Document
Housing Needs of Indigenous Women Leaving Intimate Partner Violence in Northern Communities
How a Lifecourse Approach Can Promoted Long-term Health and Wellbeing Outcomes for Māori
How Can Community-University Engagement Address Family Violence Prevention? One Child at a Time
How Can the NWT Department of Education, Culture and Employment Assist Employees to Develop Personal Resiliency in the Face of Significant Structural Change?
How Canada Stole the Idea of Native Art: The Group of Seven and Images of the Indian in the 1920's
"How Cola" From Camp Funston: American Indians and the Great War
How Coyote Created the Sun
Retelling of a traditional story. Suggested age range 6-11 years.
How Coyote Made the Stars
Retelling of a traditional story.
How Did We Get Here?: A Concise, Unvarnished Account of the History of the Relationship between Indigenous Peoples and Canada
How Do You Patent A Landscape? The Perils of Dichotomizing Cultural and Intellectual Property
How Grandma Kate Lost Her Cherokee Blood and What This Says about Race, Blood, and Belonging in Indian Country
How Has Inuit Qaujimajatuqangit Been Considered? A Student Reflects on the 2018 ArcticNet Annual Scientific Meeting
How Has the Internet Touched You? The Impact of Internet Access on a NWT Community
How "Indians" Think: Colonial Indigenous Intellectuals and the Question of Critical Race Theory
How Native is Native If You're Native?
Argues that due a shift in attitudes, being 'Native is in' and judgements are being made as to who can legitimately claim to be Aboriginal.
Entire issue on one pdf. To access article scroll to p.11.
How Nivi Got Her Names: Book Study
Language arts activities in Inuktitut and English for students in Grades 2 and 3.
How Norms Affect Policy: The Case of Sami Policy in Norway
How Poverty Shapes Women's Experiences of Health During Pregnancy: A Grounded Theory Study
How Should I Read These? Native Women Writers in Canada
How The Queen's Law Came To Cowichan
How To Decorate a House: The Re-Negotiation of Cultural Representations at the University of British Columbia Museum of Anthropology
HPV Knowledge and Attitudes among American Indian and Alaska Native Health and STEM Conference Attendees
The Hubert Wenger Bibliography of First Contacts and Observations Of Inuit/Eskimo People
[Hudson's Bay Company Archive Digitized Microfilm]
Contains links to over 10,000 volumes of the pre-1870 records from almost 500 Hudson's Bay Company posts, including post journals, incoming and outgoing correspondence and accounts, and records kept at districts and departments overseeing the post activity which include lists of servants, accounts, reports, engagement registers, abstracts of servants’ accounts and minutes of council.