Using Information to Protect Cultural Property: The Bibliographic Database on Heritage Law and Other Resources
Using Qualitative Research to Understand the Sociocultural Origins of Diabetes among Cape Breton Mi’kmaq
Value and Compensation: Subsistence Production in the Dene Economy, Fort Good Hope, Northwest Territories
Vanishing Villages of the Past: Rescue Archaeology in the Mackenzie Delta
Variability in Historic Norton Bay Subsistence and Settlement
Varieties of "Starving": Semantics and Survival in the Subarctic Fur Trade, 1750 - 1850
Vermilion Lakes Site: Adaptations and Environments in the Canadian Rockies during the Latest Pleistocene and Early Holocene
Vern Bellegarde Elected PTNA Leader
Victims of Benevolence: The Dark Legacy of the Williams Lake Residential School
A Victorian Missionary and Canadian Indian Policy: Cultural Synthesis vs Cultural Replacement
Victorian Morality and the Supervision of Indian Women Working in Phoenix, 1906-1930
A View from the North: Aboriginal and Treaty Issues in Canada
Viewpoints of Native People on Education: Problems and Priorities of Schooling in Cat Lake, Ontario
Village Journey: The Report of the Alaska Native Review Commission
Violent Victimization and Perceptions of Safety: Experiences of First Nations, Métis and Inuit Women in Canada
[The Voice of Métis: Housing Needs Assessment]
Voices of the Plains Cree
Voicing Identity: Cultural Appropriation and Indigenous Issues
Wəlastəkwey Stories: Legalized Theft
Discusses the case of traditional stories told by Elders to a researcher who retained copyright and refused to relinquish it when approached by members of the community.
Wab Kinew: Walking in Two Worlds: Educator's Guide
Young adult novel is about Indigenous teenage girl who is caught between the real and virtual worlds. Recommended for Grades 7-12.
Wabaseemoong Community Case Study: Appropriate Education In A First Nations Reserve School
Wage-labour in the Northwest Fur Trade Economy, 1760 – 1849
Wah Pah Ta Cultural Week in Cumberland House
Historical note:
A video produced in 1986 for Northern Lights School Division No. 113 with funding from the Saskatchewan Educational Development Fund.Wainwright, Alaska: The Making of Inupiaq Cultural Continuity in a Time of Change, Volumes One and Two
Walking in Two Worlds: American Indians and World War Two
Walking Through a Broken Mirror: A Way to Understand and Challenge the Fractured View of the Indigenous World Through Western Cultural Productions
Walter Dieter: 1916-1988
Wanderers in Eden: Thomas Mitchell Compared With Lewis and Clark
Warriors of Justice and Healing
Warriors of the North Pacific
The Washita
Water in Indigenous Communities
Topics include ownership of beds and shores, water rights, water quality, and enforcement of rights.
A Way of Life
Discusses the history of the fur trade in the Northwest Territories and contemporary trapping practices, and gives detailed instructions for making snowshoes, kamiks, spruce canoes, and trap sets and preparing and eating country food.
A Way of Life
Ways of Working in a Community: Reflections of a Former Community Development Worker
[We Are Métis : The Ethnography of a Halfbreed Community in Northern Alberta]
"We Begin This Work to Call Together Witnesses": The Memory of the Second World War in Stó:Ló Communities, 1993-1995
“We had become the VC in Our Own Homeland: Indigenous Veterans of Vietnam and the 1973 Siege of Wounded Knee
History Senior Project (MA) -- Bard University, 2022
We Have Always Been Here: Rebuttal to the 2021 Nunatsiavut Government Report Entitled “Examining the NunatuKavut Community Council’s Land Claim”
We, I, "Voice," and Voices: Reading Contemporary Native
American Poetry
We'wha and Klah: the American Indian Berdache as Artist and Priest
We'wha and Klah the American Indian Berdache as Artist and Priest
Weaving the Story: Northern Paiute Myth and Mary Austin's The Basket Woman
The Weicker Site: A Loma San Gabriel Hamlet in Durango, Mexico
What Can We Learn from Indigenous Technologies?
Discusses the characteristics and use of an ancient mortar and pestle.
Accompanying Material: Video.
What Does Retirement Look Like for Māori?: Literature Review
What Happens Next? Exploring Connections between Repatriation, Restorative Justice, and Reconciliation in Canada
Archaeology Thesis (PhD) -- Simon Fraser University, 2022.