Canadian History: Pre-Confederation
Most relevant material found in: Chapter 2: Indigenous Canada before Contact; Chapter 5: Indigenous Canada in the Era of Contact; Chapter 8: Rupert’s Land and the Northern Plains, 1690–1870.
2nd edition.
Canadian Indian Health: A Needs Assessment Project
Canadian Native Adolescent Solvent Abuse and Attachment Theory
Canadian Native Studies by Europeans
The Canadian Reconciliation Barometer 2021 Report
Total sample for two polls was 2,106 non-Indigenous and 1,1112 Indigenous respondents. Questions were asked about 13 indicators: good understanding of past and present; acknowledgement of government, residential school and ongoing harm, engagement, mutually respectful and nation-to-nation relationships; personal and systemic equality; Indigenous thriving; Indigenous languages; respect for natural world; and apologies.
CANDO [Council for the Advancement of Native Development Officers] Statement on the Economic Development Recommendations of the Royal Commission on Aboriginal Peoples [RCAP]
CanMEDS–Family Medicine: Indigenous Health Supplement 2020
The Canton Asylum for Insane Indians
A brief history of the Canton Asylum for Insane Indians in Canton, South Dakota.
Cape Barren Island
Cape Croker - An Evolutionary Historical Tour
Captive Minds: New Worlds and Old Metaphors
“Captive Woman?”: The Rewriting of Pocahontas
in Three Contemporary Native American Novels
Captivity and Conversion: William Apess, Mary Jemison, and Narratives of Racial Identity
[Capturing Women: The Manipulation of Cultural Imagery in Canada's Prairie West]
Capturing Women: The Manipulation of Cultural Imagery in Canada's Prairie West
The Care of Indigenous Australians
Career Planning & Job Hunting
Caribou Management and the Caribou Management Board: Eskimo Point Perspectives
"Caring for Our Affairs Ourselves": Stockbridge Mohican Women and Indian Education in Early America
Caring For The Whole Person
Cartographic Lessons: Susanna Moodie’s Roughing It in the Bush and Thomas King’s Green Grass, Running Water
Carving Out a Future: Contemporary Inuit Sculpture of Third Generation Artists From Arviat, Cape Dorset and Clyde River
A Case Study of Polar Bear Co-Management in the Eastern Canadian Arctic
Castor Resartus: The Beaver Hat in History
Compilation of primary sources, mainly newspaper articles.
Cattle and Sovereignty in the Work of Sarah Winnemucca Hopkins
Caughnawaga (Kahnawá:ke): Settler Accounts to 1900
Primarily newspaper articles.
Cautionary Stories of University Indigenization: Institutional Dynamics, Accountability Struggles, and Resilient Settler Colonial Power
Cedar
The Cedar Project - Mobile Phone Use and Acceptability of Mobile Health Among Young Indigenous People Who Have Used Drugs in British Columbia, Canada: Mixed Methods Exploratory Study
Ceh'e3teekuu!- Listen- This is Arapaho Land
Celebrating Our Path of Ahkamimoh in Northern Saskatchewan: Developing Resiliency in Youth through Education + Emocikihtayak Ahkamimohwin meskanaw Ote Kiwetinohk Saskatchewan: Sohkeyimowin Oskayak Ekiskinwahamacik
Examines the importance of a community-based education to enhance Indigenous resilience to the impact of colonization and residential schools.
Centering First Nations Concepts of Wellbeing: Toward a GDP-Alternative Index in British Columbia
Centering Stories by Urban Indigiqueers/Trans/Two-Spirit People and Indigenous Women on Practices of Decolonization, Collective-Care and Self-Care
Centering Words: Writing a Sense of Place
Ceremony and Transitions: Culture-Based Approaches to Violence Prevention
Includes three case studies: Ininew Friendship Centre, Cochrane, Ontario; St. David Catholic Elementary School, Sudbury, Ontario; Ohero:kon (Under the Husk) at Six Nations of the Grand River; and N’Amerind Friendship Centre, London, Ontario.
Challenging Boundaries: Seven Serigraphs by Kwakwaka'wakw Artist Francis Dick
Changed Forever: American Indian Boarding-School Literature. Volume II
Changemakers Lesson Plans: Remote Learning
Lesson plans focus on Native Americans who are fighting invisibility and creating change through their work, contributions from the past, and current actions which will impact the future.
Changing Academic Discourse About Native Education: Using Two Pairs of Eyes
Changing Times
Overview of Métis history from the 1840s to 1875. Discusses the collapse of the buffalo hunting economy, the establishment of the community of St. Laurent, passing of laws to establish order, and the arrival of the North West Mounted Police.
Includes questions for students.
Characteristics of Indigenous-owned Businesses
Statistics for number of businesses and owner gender.
Characterizing the Internet as an Essential Organizational Resource: Results from a Study at the Native Men's Residence
Examines the importance of internet connection for homeless and outreach service users in obtaining housing and employment.
Chasing Down a Dream
Checking Under the Bed for My Guests
Questions about the legendary little people are raised by the author after someone tugged on a house guest's hair.
Entire issue on one pdf. To access article scroll to p.5.
Cherokee Modern
The Cherokee National Female Seminary: Higher Education for Cherokee Females in the Nineteenth Century
Chief Joseph and the Cypress Hills
Child and Family Well-Being Law Making Resource Bundle
Designed for First Nations wanting to establish their own laws in response to the Act respecting First Nations, Inuit and Métis children, youth and families (Bill C-92).