Open History Seminar: Canadian History
Collection of primary and secondary sources suitable for use at secondary and post-secondary levels. Can be used to supplement Canadian History: Pre-Confederation and Canadian History: Post-Confederation.
An Open Letter
An introduction to the special edition about Indigenous post-secondary students.
Opinions and Perceptions of Indigenous Mental Health Applications from Service Providers and Youth Samples: A Pilot Study
Opioid 101: A Guide for Responding to the Opioid Crisis
The Opioid Crisis: Impact on Native American Communities
Opportunities for Standards to Contribute to Health, Safety, Resiliency, and Environmental Protection in Canada’s North
An Opportunity Lost for Aboriginal Self-Determination: Australia's Compliance with ILO 169
Oral Health: Qanuilirpitaa? 2017: Nunavik Inuit Health Survey
[Oral History Lesson Plan]
Created for Grade 4.
The Oral in the Written: A Literature Between Two Cultures
Order Up! The Decolonizing Politics of Howard Adams and Maria Campbell with a Side of Imagining Otherwise
Oregon’s History: People of the Northwest in the Land of Eden
The Organic Constitution: Aboriginal Peoples and the Evolution of Canada
Origins of Contemporary Indian Social Welfare in the Canadian Liberal State: An Historical Case Study in Social Policy, 1873-1965
Ọsẹ Dúdú: Exploring the Benefits of Yoruba Indigenous Black Soap in Southwest, Nigeria
"Other" Voices: Historical Essays on Saskatchewan Women
Otter's Journey through Indigenous Language and Law
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 Bodies, Our Stories: Sexual Violence among Native Women in Seattle, WA
Our Children , Our Future: The Health and Well-being of First Nations Children in Manitoba
Our Health Counts London
Our Health Counts: Population-Based Measures of Urban Inuit Health Determinants, Health Status, and Health Care Access
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 Health Counts Toronto: An Inclusive Community-Driven Health Survey for Indigenous Peoples in Toronto: Draft
Our Health Counts Toronto Fact Sheets
Our Languages, Our Stories: Towards the Revitalization and Retention of Indigenous Languages in Urban Environments: Discussion Paper
Our (Museum) World Turned Upside Down: Re-Presenting Native American Arts
Our Relationship with the Stars and How We Came To Be
Lesson plans suitable for Grades 4 to 6.
Our Sacred Water: Theorizing Kuuyam as a Decolonial Possibility
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 War Paint Is Writers' Ink: Anishinaabe Literary Transnationalism
“Ours from the top to the very bottom”: Seneca Land, Colonial Development, Proto-Conservation, and Resistance in the Early American Republic
Overcoming Dualistic Pedagogy: Reframing Māori–Pākehā Histories for New Zealand Students
Overcoming the Barricades: The Crisis at Oka as a Case Study in Political Communication
The Overlap between the Child Welfare and Youth Criminal Justice Systems: Documenting "Cross-Over Kids" in Manitoba
Overlapping/Contesting Representations: Tourism and Native/Indian Canadians
Overqualification among Aboriginal Workers in Canada
An Overview of Demographic, Social and Economic Conditions among Alberta's Registered Indian Population
An Overview of Demographic, Social and Economic Conditions among Manitoba's Registered Indian Population
Overweight in Cree Schoolchildren and Adolescents Associated With Diet, Low Physical Activity, and High Television Viewing
Pacific University Graduates in New Zealand: What Helps and Hinders Completion
Megan Gollop
Painting Native America in Public: American Indian Artists and the New Deal
Painting You, Painting Me: Viewing the 'Other' through Gendered-Violence against Indigenous Women and Girls in Kent Monkman's "Shame and Prejudice: A Story of Resilience"
Religion Master's Essay (M.A) -- Queen's University, 2018.