Daphne Odjig
Dare to Compare: Americanizing the Holocaust
A Dark History: Missing and Murdered Indigenous Women
"The Darkest Tapestry": Indian Residential School Memorialization at the Keeping Place Fort Qu'Appelle, Saskatchewan
Data Colonialism in Canada: Decolonizing Data through Indigenous Data Governance
Communication Thesis (MA) -- Carleton University, 2021.
Data Genocide of American Indians and Alaska Natives in COVID-19 Data: A Report Card Grading U.S. States' Quality of COVID-19 Racial Data and Their Effectiveness in Collecting and Reporting Data on American Indian and Alaska Native Populations
Data or Dogma? A Reply to Robert L. Berner
Dating the Entry of Corn (Zea Mays) into the Lower Great Lakes Region
David Osawabine Interview
David Thompson's Writing of His Travels: The Genetics of an Emerging Exploration Text
The David Unapian Award
Davis Inlet: 'I'll Never Stop Sniffing Gas'
Days Gone By
De-Colonial Intersections of Conservation and Healing: The Indian Residential School System
(De)colonizing Academe: Knowing Our Relations
De Kiksuyapo! (Remember This!): Dakota Language, History, and Identity in the Eli Taylor Narratives
Dead Man, Dead West
Dealer's Choice: Derrald Taylor
Dealer's Choice: Mosha Michael
Dealing with Shame and Unresolved Trauma: Residential School and Its Impact on the 2nd and 3rd Generation Adults
[A Death Feast in Dimlahamid]
Death in the Daily Life of the Ross Colony: Mortuary Behavior in Frontier Russian America
Decentering White Space in the Two-Year College English Classroom: A Perspective through CRT, TribalCrit, and LatCrit
English Thesis (PhD) -- University of Texas at Arlington, 2021.
Decision on Duck Creek: Two Green Bay Reservations and Their Boundaries, 1816-1996
Declaration of the International Indigenous Women's Forum
Decolonization, Not Patriation: The Constitution Express at the Russell Tribunal
Decolonization Toolkit
Decolonizing Curricular Resources: A Bibliography for Teaching and Learning Native American and Indigenous Studies in New England
Resources categorized by grade level and subject matter.
Decolonizing Health in Canada: A Manitoba First Nation Perspective
Reports results of 183 interviews and focus groups held between 2015 and 2015 in eight communities with a variety of health delivery systems, geographies, accessibilities and language groups. Four themes emerged: control of healthcare, traditional medicine and healing practices, community participation, and dealing with the impacts of colonization.
Decolonizing Tribal Histories
Decolonizing Urban Space: The Future Potentials of New Urban Reserves and the Indigenization of Cities
Deconstructing Fetal Alcohol Syndrome: A Critical Inquiry into the Discourse around Alcohol, Women, Ethnicity, Aboriginals and Disease
Deconstructing the Myth of Self-Government
Decreasing Traditional Food Use Affects Diet Quality for Adult Dene/Métis in 16 Communities of the Canadian Northwest Territories
The Defeat of Assimilation and the Rise of Colonialism on the Fort Belknap Reservation,1873-1925
Defining Indigenous Businesses in Canada
Looks at Canadian comparators in a number of juristictions and international comparators in Australia, New Zealand and Hawaii.
Defining Parameters: Aboriginal Rights, Treaty Rights, and the Sparrow Justificatory Test
Definition of an Inuit Cultural Model and Social Determinants of Health for Nunavik Community Component: Qanuilirpitaa? 2017: Nunavik Inuit Health Survey
Delgamuukw and the Protection of Aboriginal Land Interests
Argues that determining the "extent to which title-holders have control over Aboriginal title lands," requires that the fiduciary responsibility of the Crown be considered as well.
Delgamuukw v. British Columbia, [1997] 3 S.C.R. 1010
Delivering Counsellor Training to First Nations: Emerging Issues
A Demographic View of Northern Cheyenne Women in 1900
Dempsey Bob
Dene Traditional Leadership: The Deh Cho Region
Denial of Genocide in the California Gold Rush Era: The Case of Gary Clayton Anderson
Examines Gary Anderson's claim that the settler's violent acts against the Indigenous population was not genocidal in nature.