Missing Nimâmâ: Guide for Secondary Classroom Use
The Mississippi Choctaw: A Case Study of Tribal Identity Problems
Mitakuye Oyasin (We Are All Related): Connecting Communication and Culture of the Lakota
Mixed-blood: Indigenous-Black Identity in Colonial Canada
MMIWG: We Demand More: A Corrected Research Study of Missing and Murdered Indigenous Women & Girls in Washington State
Mobile Health for First Nations Populations: Systematic Review
The Moccasin Identifier Education Kit
Modeling the Impact of the COVID-19 Pandemic on First Nations, Metis, and Inuit Communities: Some Considerations
Examines the importance of having readily available data for the purpose of planning and policy making.
Models of Tribal Promising Practices: Tribal Opioid Overdose Prevention, Care Coordination, and Data Systems
Money Stories: Financial Resilience among Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Australians
Montréal Homelessness & Indigenous Housing: A Policy Report with Recommendations for Action
Moose Hide = Golǫdhéh
Describes the process of preparing and curing moose hide.
More Than Missions: Native Californians and Allies Changing the Story of California History
Examines the shift towards a more inclusive California state history that incorporates Indigenous perspectives.
More Than Words: Outlining Preconditions to Collaboration Among First Nations, the Federal Government, and the Provincial Government
Looks at the work towards creating a more collaborative relationship between the different levels of government and its Indigenous populations. In particular the articles focuses on the precondition phase of the collaboration process.
The Most Promising Practices in the Field of Employment and Training among First Nations and Inuit
Identifies examples of best practices in the areas of vocational training and skills acquisition, partnerships, and research and capacity building, and makes three recommendations.
A Movement to Reclaim American Indian Health through Tribal Sovereignty, Community Partnerships, and Growing Tribally-Driven Health Research
Moving Forward: No Scientific Integrity without an Acknowledgment of Past Wrongs
Moving From Patriarchal Benevolence to Relationship: Walking Humbly With Indigenous People
Discusses the use of Indigenous worldviews by non-Indigenous educators to more effectively teach Indigenous students in Indigenous communities.
Moving Towards a Language Nest: Stories and Insights from nḱmalqs
Looks at the language nest as way to promote language revitalization with Sylix children.
Moving Towards an Indigenous Research Process: A Reflexive Approach to Empirical Work with First Nations Communities in Canada
Moving Towards Cultural Safety in Mental Health and Addictions Contracting for Urban Indigenous Peoples: Lessons from British Columbia
Health Sciences Thesis (PhD) -- Simon Fraser University, 2020.
Multimorbidity Prevalence in Canada: A Comparison of Northern Territories with Provinces, 2013/14
“My Fear Is Losing Everything”: The Climate Crisis and First Nations' Right to Food in Canada
My Reflection of that Time
"My Reserve Is A Nation"
My Seasonal Round: An Integrated Unit for Elementary Social Studies and Science
Seasonal round refers to First Nations groups' cycle of moving from one resource-gathering area to another throughout the year. This resource looks patterns in four geographic regions in British Columbia and explores topics such habitat, natural resources, and stability and change. Revised version.
Related material: Blackline masters.
My Sobriety: Getting Rehabilitated? Chapter 12
My Sobriety: Into Bennelong, Chapter IX [9]
My Sobriety: Resenting the Rules, Chapter X [10]
My Sobriety: Seeing a Psychiatrist, Chapter 11
The Mystery Man of Sand Creek: George Laird Shoup
Mythology
N.A.M.H.A.: The National Aboriginal Mental Health Association
Naammaktunga (“I am well”)! Feeding Families and People-Food Relationships in Kugluktuk, Nunavut: Exploring What the Lenses of Food Sovereignty and Indigenous Resilience Can Offer to Food System Governance
Forestry Thesis (Ph.D.)--University of British Columbia, 2020.