How Coyote Brought Fire to the People: A Native American Legend
Activity promotes reading fluency by having children read parts in a script for the traditional story.
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 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 Many Separated Aboriginal Children?
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 Read These? Native Women Writers in Canada. Helen Hoy.
How To Decorate a House: The Re-Negotiation of Cultural Representations at the University of British Columbia Museum of Anthropology
How to Read Aboriginal Legal Texts From Upper Canada
"How Will I Sew My Baskets?": Women Vendors, Market Art, and Incipient Political Activism in Anchorage, Alaska
Hudson's Bay Company Archives: HBC Fur Trade Post Map
Human Dorset Remains from Igloolik, Canada
Human Health Implications of Environmental Contaminants in Arctic Canada: a Review
Human Rights Complaint Filed Against MP Pankiw
Discusses the Canadian Human Rights Commission complaint filed by John Melenchuk regarding a controversial pamphlet sent out by Saskatoon Member of Parliament Jim Pankiw. At one point in the article Michael Woodiwiss contends that the essential difference between crimes committed by colonizers and contemporary Aboriginals is that the formers’ crimes went unpunished and mostly unrecorded.
Entire issue on one pdf. To access article scroll to p.8.
Human Rights in Theory and Practice: A Sociological Study of Aboriginal Peoples and the New Brunswick Human Rights Commission, 1967-1997
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
A Hunger for Justice
"Hunger was never absent": How Residential School Diets Shaped Current Patterns of Diabetes among Indigenous Peoples in Canada
Huron Calls on Lay People
Hurricanes and Fires: Chaotics in Sherman Alexie's Smoke Signals and The Lone Ranger and Tonto Fistfight in Heaven
Hybrid Voices/Hybrid Texts: A Study of Syncretism in the Works of Samson Occom, Handsome Lake, Leslie Marmon Silko and Louise Erdrich
Hybridism as a Means of (De)Constructing the Old Paradigm: The Good Guys (White) Versus the Bad Ones (Red)
Hydroelectric Development and Dietary Delocalization in Northern Manitoba, Canada
Hydrolysis: Coal Mine Mesa, Navajo Nation
Hypertension Prevalence among Penobscot Indians of Indian Island, Maine
"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 Have More Than One Song”: Singing and Bird Song in the Work of Carter Revard
“I Have Seen the Future and I Won’t Go”: The Comic Vision of Craig Strete’s Science Fiction Stories
i hear every word
I Left My Life Back South
"I'm not really healed- I'm just bandaged up": Perceptions of Healing Among Former Students of Indian Residential Schools
'I Think That What's Happening in Aboriginal Education Is That We're Taking Control': Aboriginal Teachers' Stories of Self-Determination
“I Thought You'd Call Her White Feather”: Native Women and Racial Microaggressions in Doctoral Education
Looks at the cross-cultural experiences of female Indigenous doctoral students in the United States.