Telling New Myths: Contemporary Native American Animal Narratives From Michigan
Telling Our Stories: Voices on the Land: A Performing Arts and Digital Storytelling Teaching Guide for Educators
Telling Our Twisted Histories
Website contains links to a series of 12 podcasts which explore the impact of words such as reconciliation, indian time, school, reserve, and savage. Host Kaniehti:io Horn engages in conversations with more than 70 people from 15 First Nations, Inuit and Métis communities.
Ten-Year Experience of Fetal Alcohol Spectrum Disorder: Diagnostic and Resource Challenges in Indigenous Children
Ten Years of Health Transfer First Nation and Inuit Control
Tensions in Fostering ‘local food’ in the Northwest Territories: Contending with Settler Colonialism in Northern Research
Political Economy Thesis (MA) -- Carleton University, 2021.
Termination by Decentralization? Native American Responses to Federal Regional Councils, 1969-1983
The Terrestrial and Aquatic Intelligence of Linda Hogan
A Terrible Heritage
Thanksgiving ... A Resource Guide: An Indian Education Curriculum Unit
Discusses some of the myths and stereotypes associated with Thanksgiving and contrasts them to the factual version of what took place when the pilgrims landed in the United States.
That Also Is You: Some Classics of Native Canadian Literature
'That's My Country Belonging to Me': Aboriginal Land Tenure and Dispossession in Nineteenth Century Western Victoria
Theoretical and Empirical Investigation Into Property Rights Formation; Case Study: The Southern Ontario Ojibway
Theory From Practice: First Nations Popular Music Canada
A Theory of Northern Athapaskan Prehistory
"There Are No Shortcuts": The Long Road to Treaty 7 Education
History Thesis (M.A.)--University of Saskatchewan, 2017.
“There Is a Difference”: Mi'kmaw Students' Perceptions and Experiences in a Public School and in a Band-Operated School
Compares culturally responsive teaching between Mi'kma'ki run schools and public schools for Indigenous students.
"There is no end to relationship among the Indians": Ojibwa Families and Kinship in Historical Perspective
There Is No Vaccine for Stigma: A Rapid Evidence Review of Stigma Mitigation Strategies During Past Outbreaks among Indigenous Populations Living in Rural, Remote and Northern Regions of Canada and What Can Be Learned For COVID-19
"There's a River to Consider": Heid E. Erdrich's "Pre-Occupied"
There's No Place Like Home: The Dichotomy Between Ontological and Functional Depictions of Community in Policy Initiatives
"They Drink Because They Don't Have Money, and They Don't Have Money Because They Drink": Relation to Alcohol and Money Within a Chukotkan Village
Outlines the relationship between alcohol and money as a cultural and social framework in Chukotkan villages.
"They failed to protect me": Enhancing Response to and Surveillance of Domestic & Intimate Partner Violence and Missing and Murdered Indigenous Women, Girls, and Two Spirit People of California During the COVID-19 Pandemic
"They Need to Get Over It ..." The Dismissal of Native American Social Issues
"They Take Care of Their Own": Healthcare Professionals' Constructions of Sami Persons with Dementia and Their Families' Reluctance to Seek and Accept Help through Attributions to Multiple Contexts
"They Treated Me Like Crap and I Know It Was Because I Was Native": The Healthcare Experiences of Aboriginal Peoples Living in Vancouver's Inner City
Think Indigenous [2017]: Saskatoon, SK, Treaty 6 Territory: Andrea Landry
Think Indigenous [2017]: Saskatoon, SK, Treaty 6 Territory: Angie Caron
Think Indigenous [2017]: Saskatoon, SK, Treaty 6 Territory: Francois Paulette
Think Indigenous [2017]: Saskatoon, SK, Treaty 6 Territory: Harold Johnson
Think Indigenous [2017]: Saskatoon, SK, Treaty 6 Territory: Kevin Lewis
Think Indigenous [2017]: Saskatoon, SK, Treaty 6 Territory: Maria Linklater
Think Indigenous [2017]: Saskatoon, SK, Treaty 6 Territory: Max Fineday
Think Indigenous [2017]: Saskatoon, SK, Treaty 6 Territory: Ryan McMahon
Think Indigenous [2017]: Saskatoon, SK, Treaty 6 Territory: Sheryl Kimbley
Think Indigenous [2017]: Saskatoon, SK, Treaty 6 Territory: Simon Bird
Think Indigenous [2017]: Saskatoon, SK, Treaty 6 Territory: T. J. Warren, Omiyosiw Warren
Thinking Food Security "Outside the Box"
Thinking with Nunangat in Proposing Pedagogies for/with Inuit Early Childhood Education
The Third National Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Health Workers' Conference: Linking Our Future
"This Ain't Dances with Salmon": Native American Tropes in Dime Novels and Western Film Referencing Dances with Wolves
"This is a Continuation of Genocide": Examining the Pathologization of Indigeneity in the 2016 Suicide Crisis and State of Emergency in Attawapiskat First Nation
This Is About Healing: The Significance of the Feminine, Change and Animal Lore
"This is How We did It": One Canadian First Nation Community's Effort to Achieve Aboriginal Justice
"This Is My History, I Know Who I Am": History, Factionalist Competition, and the Assumption of Imposition in the Kahnawake Mohawk Nation
This Is Not An Exit: The Road Narrative in Contemporary American Literature and Film
Those Who Belong: Identity, Family, Blood and Citizenship Among the White Earth Anishinaabeg
Those Who Run in the Sky
The Three Sisters: Renewing the World
Discusses the long history of Indigenous agriculture, how plants from the New World spread to the Old. and the need to return to traditional practices and regain food sovereignty. Educators share their experiences and lesson plans which use the story of the Three Sisters to teach a variety of subjects. Created to accompany the video.