Hospitalization for Ambulatory Care Sensitive Conditions among Urban Métis Adults
Hospitalizations For Injury Among American Indian Youth in Washington
Hot Lunch Program One of Many Services to Community
Brief profile of Elder Theresa Stevenson, recipient of the National Aboriginal Achievement Award for Community Development. Theresa is recognized for her devotion to humanitarian causes such as advocating for Aboriginal role models in schools, hot lunch programs, and low income housing.
Entire issue on one pdf. To access article scroll to p.33.
House Made of Dawn: A Positively Ambivalent Bildungsroman
House of Difference: Cultural Politics and National Identity in Canada
Household Economies: The Role of Animals in a Historic Period Chiefdom on the California Coast
Housing and Indigenous Disability: Lived Experiences of Housing and Community Infrastructure
Housing as a Social Determinant of First Nations, Inuit, and Métis Health
Housing Conditions and Respiratory Hospitalizations among First Nations People in Canada
The Housing Conditions of Aboriginal People in Canada: Census of Population, 2016
Housing Needs of American Indians and Alaska Natives in Tribal Areas: A Report from the Assessment of American Indian, Alaska Native, and Native Hawaiian Housing Needs
Housing Policy, Aging, and Life Course Construction in a Canadian Inuit Community
Housing the Homeguard at Moose Factory: 1730-1982
How Can the Health Community Foster and Promote the Health of Aboriginal Children and Youth?
How Do You Patent A Landscape? The Perils of Dichotomizing Cultural and Intellectual Property
How Do You Say Watermelon?
How Does the Media Portray Drinking Water Security in Indigenous Communities in Canada?: An Analysis of Canadian Newspaper Coverage from 2000-2015
Search performed in Windspeaker, Toronto Star, The Globe and Mail, and National Post yielded 256 relevant results. Analysis of articles found limited coverage focused of government responses rather than preventative measures.
How Does the New TANF Work Requirement "Work" in Rural Minority Communities? A Case Study of the Northern Cheyenne Nation
How Has the Internet Touched You? The Impact of Internet Access on a NWT Community
How I Learned to Climb Trees
How Many Legs Does a Bear Have?
How Native American Rappers Communicate and Create a Modern Identity
How Native is Native If You're Native?
Argues that due a shift in attitudes, being 'Native is in' and judgements are being made as to who can legitimately claim to be Aboriginal.
Entire issue on one pdf. To access article scroll to p.11.
How Poverty Shapes Women's Experiences of Health During Pregnancy: A Grounded Theory Study
How Raven Marked the Land When the Earth Was New
"'How Should I Eat These?' With Your Mouth, Asshole": First Nations Women's Literature Responds to Colonial Discourse
How the West Was Lost: Frederick Haultain and the Foundation of Saskatchewan
How To Decorate a House: The Re-Negotiation of Cultural Representations at the University of British Columbia Museum of Anthropology
Howard Contin (Meskiash) Interview
Hudson's Bay Company Archives: HBC Fur Trade Post Map
Human Health Implications of Environmental Contaminants in Arctic Canada: a Review
Human Rights in Theory and Practice: A Sociological Study of Aboriginal Peoples and the New Brunswick Human Rights Commission, 1967-1997
Human Rights & the Confederacy 15 Years After Oka
Human Security and Aboriginal Women in Canada
Human Trafficking: Information on Cases in Indian Country or That Involved Native Americans
Human Trafficking: Investigations in Indian Country or Involving Native Americans and Actions Needed to Report on Victims Served
Humanitarian, M.D.: Dr. Peter H. Bryce's Contributions to Canadian Federal Native and Immigration Policy, 1904-1921
"Hunger was never absent": How Residential School Diets Shaped Current Patterns of Diabetes among Indigenous Peoples in Canada
Hunters and Workers Among the Nemaska Cree: The Role of Ideology in a Dependent Mode of Production
Huron Calls on Lay People
Hybrid Voices/Hybrid Texts: A Study of Syncretism in the Works of Samson Occom, Handsome Lake, Leslie Marmon Silko and Louise Erdrich
Hydro-Quebec Buys Inuit Art
Hydrolysis: Coal Mine Mesa, Navajo Nation
"I am a Red-Skin": The Adoption of a Native American Expression (1769-1826)
"I Am Not a Women's Libber Although Sometimes I Sound Like One": Indigenous Feminism and Politicized Motherhood
"I Became a Woman Through My Words": The Indigenous Feminist Writing of Lee Maracle and Beth Brant
I Can Make a Difference and so Can You!
I Can Make Art ... Like Andrew Qappik
I Can Make Art ... Like Andrew Qappik: [Study Guide]
Guide to accompany film, I Can Make Art ... Like Andrew Qappik. Target ages 9-12. Contains previewing and post viewing activities, follow up discussion and activity ideas.