Opaskwayak Cree Nation Wetland Ethnoecology: Land, Identity and Well-Being in a Flooded Landscape
Open Skin Boats of the Aleutians, Kokiak Island, and Prince William Sound
"Opening Up New Worlds": The Life of Olive Patricia Dickason
Opinions and Perceptions of Indigenous Mental Health Applications from Service Providers and Youth Samples: A Pilot Study
The Oppositional Paradigm of Purity versus Pollution in Charles Hudson's: "The Southeastern Indians"
Oral Health in a First Nations and a Non-Aboriginal Population in Manitoba
Oral Health of Adults in Northern Norway: A Pilot Study
Oral Health: Qanuilirpitaa? 2017: Nunavik Inuit Health Survey
[Oral History Lesson Plan]
Created for Grade 4.
Oral Narratives and Aboriginal Pasts: An
Interdisciplinary Review of the Literatures on Oral Traditions and Oral Histories
Orality & Literacy: Reflections Across Disciplines
Order of Canada Awarded to David Ahenakew
Historical note:
David Ahenakew (born July 28, 1933) is a Canadian First Nations politician, and former National Chief of the Assembly of First Nations. Ahenakew is a controversial public figure in Canada due to anti-semetic comments regarding World War 2 and the Holocaust.[The Orders of the Dreamed: George Nelson on Cree and Northern Ojibwa Religion and Myth, 1823]
Oregon’s History: People of the Northwest in the Land of Eden
Les Organisations Autochtones et L'Émergence d'un Nouveau Paradigme dans les Affaires Indiennes au Canada
Organizational Transformation: A Case Study of Two Aboriginal Organizations
[Organizational Traps: Groupthink, Rumor and Ego]
Original Men's Straight Dance
Oscelola and the Great Seminole War
Ọsẹ Dúdú: Exploring the Benefits of Yoruba Indigenous Black Soap in Southwest, Nigeria
Oskayak Students Speak up for Indigenous Rights
The Other Movement: Indian Rights and Civil Rights in the Deep South
Our Betrayed Wards: A Story of "Chicanery, Infidelity and the Prostitution of Trust"
Originally published in 1921. This version transcribed, curated and with additions. The author was the Indian Agent for the "Blood and Peigan" Indians from 1898 to 1911.
Our Children, Our Dreaming: A Call for a More Just Approach for Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Children and Families
Our Children , Our Future: The Health and Well-being of First Nations Children in Manitoba
Our Greatest Challenge: Aboriginal Children and Human Rights
Our Healing, Our Solutions: Volume 3
Our Health Counts Thunder Bay Factsheets
Survey conducted using Respondent-Driven Sampling resulted in 601 adult and 229 child surveys being completed. In addition to health questions respondents were asked about other topics such as culture, identity, housing, discrimination, and access to justice.
Our Land, Our Language: Connecting Dispossession and Health Equity in an Indigenous Context
Our Land, Our Languages: Language Learning in Indigenous Communities
Our Living Ecosystem: What Are the Interconnections among the Elements Surrounding Us? A Classroom-Based Activity in Nunavik
Comments on an environmental education activity designed to promote an ecosystem approach to health.
NOTE: Also published as Journal of Aboriginal Health, Summer, 2015.
‘Our Place, Our Home’: Indigenous Planning, Urban Space, and Decolonization in Winnipeg, Manitoba
Our Relationship with the Stars and How We Came To Be
Lesson plans suitable for Grades 4 to 6.
Our Smallest Warriors, Our Strongest Medicine: Overcoming COVID-19
Storybook designed to be read by caregivers, parents, and teachers to children affected by the pandemic.
Our Stories: How We Became Doctors
Our Tellings: Interior Salish Stories of the Nlha7kápmx People
Our Thinking Made Visible: Aboriginal Governance: Emerging Directions
Designed to accompany videos featuring Inuit, First Nations, and Metis leaders.
Our Thinking Made Visible: Issues of Indigenous Peoples in a Global Context
For use with videos featuring Metis, First Nations, and Inuit leaders.