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 Knowing About Health: An Aboriginal Perspective
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 Are Not You: First Nations and Canadian Modernity
“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'wha and Klah: the American Indian Berdache as Artist and Priest
We'wha and Klah the American Indian Berdache as Artist and Priest
Wear Traces and Projectile Impact: A Review of the Experimental and Archaeological Evidence
Weavers of Change: Portraits of Native American Women Educational Leaders
Weaving Worlds: Colliding Traditions Collaborating with Musqueam Weaver and Educator Debra Sparrow
The Weicker Site: A Loma San Gabriel Hamlet in Durango, Mexico
Welcome Stranger: Tourism Development Among the Shuswap People of the South-Central Interior of British Columbia, Canada
Western Arctic Women Artists' Perspectives on Education and Art
Westward Bound: Promises of a Saving Space
English Thesis (Ph.D.)--University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, 1997.
Wh-Constructions in Nêhiyawêwin (Plains Cree)
What Can We Learn from Indigenous Technologies?
Discusses the characteristics and use of an ancient mortar and pestle.
Accompanying Material: Video.
What Do You Call an Indian Woman with A Law Degree? Nine Aboriginal Women at The University of Saskatchewan Speak Out
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.
What Makes Us Strong: Urban Aboriginal Perspectives on Wellness and Strength
What's Law Got to Do With It? The Protection of Aboriginal Title in Canada
What's New For Health Workers?
What "Violent Violets" Want: Female Desire in Contemporary Women's Fiction
Whatever Happened to the Kanakas?
"When I Am Lonely the Mountains Call Me": The Impact of Sacred Geography on Navajo Psychological Well Being
When Our Words Return: Writing, Hearing, and Remembering Oral Traditions of Alaska and the Yukon
Where Do Policy Makers And Politicians Look For Policy Directions?
Where My edhéhke Take Me In Reimagining Curriculum: A Narrative Inquiry into the Experiences of Dene Learning From/With the Land
Education Thesis (EdD) - University of Alberta, 2022.
The Whig Interpretation of the History of Red River
White Eyes' Lies and the Battle for Dzil Nchaa Si'an
White Man's Law and the American Indian Family in the Assimilation Era
White Shadows: The Use of Doppelgangers in Sherman Alexie’s Reservation Blues
"White Welfare, Black Entitlement': The Social Security Access Controversy, 1939-59
Who and What Is a Canadian Indian? The Impact of Bill C-31 Upon Demographic and Epidemiologic Measures of the Registered Indian Population of Manitoba
Who Lived In This House? A Study Of Koyukuk River Semisubterranean Houses
Who Shot the Sheriff: Storytelling, Indian Identity, and the Marketplace of Masculinity in D'Arcy Mcnickle's The Surrounded
Whose Home on the Range? Finding Room for Native Americans, African Americans, and Latino Americans in the Revisionist Western
Whose Voices Count? Oral Sources and Twentieth-Century American Indian History
Why are Indigenous Affairs Policies Framed in ways that Undermine Indigenous Health and Equity?
Examines how the framing of speeches by three different political groups impact Indigenous populations access to health equity.
Why Baby Why: Howard Broomfield's Documentation of the Dunne-Za Soundscape
Why Native Literature?
Why No Iroquois Fiction?
Widening the Circle of Care: Digital Stories of Community-Based Caregiving in a Mohawk First Nation
Using digital storytelling to identify the importance of cultural identity for the care-giving of those living cancer within the Mohawk Nation of Kahnawake.
The Widow and the Child
Wiijijiibaakwemaadaa Gookum [Let's Cook with Grandma]
Colouring book created for Ojibwe language immersion program. Text in Ojibwe with Ojibwe-English glossary.