Boye Ladd: A Visit from a Friend
Powwow dancer, Boye Ladd, relates traditional teachings on various topics relating to First Nations culture, including information about the sacred drum, respect for other people and groups, and the right to wear an eagle feather.
Entire issue on one pdf. To access article scroll to p.29.
The Braiding Histories Stories
A Brand New Day For Indigenous Dentists
Breaking Copper: Legislating the Repatriation of First Nations Cultural Property to Restore Self-Determination and Promote Reconciliation
Breaking the Chain of Dependency: Using Treaty Land Entitlement to Create First Nations Economic Self-Sufficiency in Saskatchewan
Breaking the Cycle
Breaking the Cycle
Breast Cancer Survival in Ontario's First Nations Women: Understanding the Determinants
Breathing Out "the songs that want to be sung": A Dialogue on Research, Colonization and Pedagogy Focused on the Canadian Arctic
Breechclouts: Full and Modified
Brian Cladoosby: The Swinomish Indian Tribal Community's Approach to Governance and Intergovernmental Relations
Brian Jungen, Selected Works & Interview
A Bridge to Reconciliation: A Critique of the Indian Residential School Truth Commission
Bridges and Barriers 2010: Yukon Experiences with Poverty, Social Exclusion and Inclusion
Bridging Cultural Divides
Bridging Econometrics and First Nations Child and Family Service Agency Funding: Phase One Report: A Summary of Research Needed to Explore Three Funding Models for First Nations Child Welfare Agencies
Bridging National Borders in North America: Transnational and Comparative Histories
Bridging Research to Practice: Native American Stories of Becoming Smoke-free
Bridging Restorative Justice and Crime Prevention Through Social Development
Bridging the Gap: A Collaborative Inquiry Into the Experience of Cross-Cultural Environmental Initiatives
Brief Administrative History of the Residential Schools & The Presbyterian Church in Canada's Healing and Reconciliation Efforts
A Brief History and Potential Future Vision for Additions to Reserves
A Brief History of Effects of Colonialism on First Nations in Canada
A Brief History of the Military Career of Lieutenant R. Lyndhurst Wadmore, Infantry School Corps, April 8, 1885 to July 20, 1885, N.W. Campaign.
Historical note:
Robinson Lyndhurst Wadmore, who was born in England in 1855, entered the Canadian forces as a lieutenant in 1883 and served with the Royal Canadian Regiment during the Northwest Resistance of 1885. Wadmore became a colonel in 1910. He died in Victoria, BC, in 1955.Bringing Home Methylmercury: The Construction of an Authoritative Object of Knowledge for a Cree Community in Northern Quebec
Bringing Indigenous Voices to the Workplace
Bringing Them Home
Bringing Tradition Home: Aboriginal Parenting in Today's World: Facilitator's Guide
Bringing Traditional Teachings to Leadership
British Columbia’s Community Benefits Agreement: Economic Justice for Indigenous Workers in Relation to Union Politics in Urban Infrastructure Projects
Discusses the barriers and lack of community engagement in a job program designed to improve employment for underrepresented groups in British Columbia.
British Columbia Tripartite First Nations Health: Basis for a Framework Agreement on Health Governance
British Columbia Tripartite First Nations Health Plan: Year in Review 2008-2009
Broken Dreams; No Regrets
Broken Promises: Evaluating the Native American Health Care System
Broken Treaties: United States and Canadian Relations With the Lakotas and the Plains Cree, 1868-1885
Brokenleg Named Head of Native Ministries at VST
Brothers and Others: Christian Religions on the Reservation
Buffalo Past and Present
Uses the Madison Buffalo Jump State Park as a starting point to discuss the buffalo's importance in the economies, cosmologies, social organization, and spiritual life of Indigenous peoples of the plains. Recommended for use with Grade 9-12 students.
The Buffalo People: Prehistoric Archaeology on the Canadian Plains
The Buffalo Wars
Science Thesis (M.Sc.) -- Hood College, 2004.