Joe Blondeau Interview
Joe McAuley Remembers: "Today Everything Is Different"
Joe Morin: "I Told Myself I Shouldn't Have Come"
Joe Sylvester Interview
Consists of an interview with Joe Sylvester where he gives an account of Indian medicine; legends concerning migration of Algonquin Indians; the role of elders; of the deterioration of reservation conditions following World War II; the religious significance of the number "four"; views on welfare and its role in disrupting traditional Indian values; and a legend about the origin of the drum.
John Joe Larocque Interview
John Piper, 'Conqueror of the Interior'
John Rowzée Peyton and the Myth of the Mound Builders
Joining the Circle: A Practitioner's Guide to Responsive Education for Native Students
Jordan's Principle: The Struggle to Access On-Reserve Health Care for High-Needs Indigenous Children in Canada
Journeying Toward a Praxis of Indigenous Maternal Pedagogy: Lessons from Our Sweetgrass Baskets
Jurisdiction for Aboriginal Health in Canada
Jurisprudential Challenges
Justice is Indivisible: Palestine as a Feminist Issue
Justice Programs for Aboriginal and Other Indigenous Communities
Kahwà:tsire: Indigenous Families in a Family Therapy Practice with the Indigenous Worldview as the Foundation
Kakikekaskakowew (Kee-A-Kee-Kasacoo-Way) : "He Forever War Whoops"
Kalgoorlie Aboriginal Medical Service
Kanehsatake: 270 Years of Resistance
Keeping the "Co" in the Co-Management of Northern Resources
Ken S. Coates. Best Left as Indians: Native-White Relations in the Yukon Territory, 1840-1973
Kent Monkman: A Trickster With a Cause Crashes Canada's 150th Birthday Party
Key Populations Brief: Indigenous Peoples
Kicking the Habit
Kihcitwâw Kîkway Meskocipayiwin (Sacred Changes): Transforming Gendered Protocols in Cree Ceremonies through Cree Law
Law Thesis (LL.M.)--University of Victoria, 2017.
Killing the Indian in the Child: Materialities of Death and Political Formations of Life in the Canadian Indian Residential School System
Kim Scott's Benang and the Removal of Identity in Australian Aboriginal Literature
Kinoosao
Kinship as Cosmology: Potatoes as Offspring Among the Aymara of Highland Bolivia
Kiotsaeton's Three Rivers Address: An Example of "Effective" Iroquois Oratory
Kiya Waneekah: (Don't Forget)
Klee Wyck: The Eye of the Other
Focuses on several facets of Emily Carr's book Klee Wyck: the feminist tone; the effect of modernism on native life; examination of the sketches; the message of disintegration, loss and of hope.
Know Your Status: A Tool Kit for HIV Programs in Saskatchewan First Nations
Brief discussion of community engagement and readiness, education, harm reduction, testing, treatment, client support and case management, and surveillance.
Knowing, Growing Showing: Indigenous Consumer and Financial Literacy: Research to Practice
Knowledge, Attitudes and Behavior of Cree Secondary School Students in Relation to AIDS
Ko-pat Ka-nat
Kon and the Circle of Life
Primary reading level storybook.
Koniag Ceremonialism: An Archaeological and Ethnohistoric Analysis of Sociopolitical Complexity and Ritual Among the Pacific Eskimo
Labour Relations and Indian Self-Determination: A Fort Alexander Case Study
Labrador Inuit on the Hunt: Seasonal Patterns, Techniques, and Animals as They Appear in the Early Moravian Diaries
Ladies, Livestock, Land and Lucre: Women's Networks and Social Status on the Western Navajo Reservation
A Laguna Porfolio
Lakota Performers in Europe: Their Culture and the Artifacts They Left Behind
Land-Based Food Initiatives in Two Rural and Remote Indigenous Communities
Land-Based Learning: A Case Study Report for Educators Tasked with Integrating Indigenous Worldviews into Classrooms
Looks at the H’a H’a Tumxulaux Outdoor Education Program located in Trail, British Columbia which is targeted at 12-15 year-olds.
The Land Is Our History: Indigeneity, Law, and the Settler State
Land, Language, and Learning: Inuit Share Experiences and Expectations of Schooling
Education Dissertation (PhD) -- York University, 2017.