Their Darkest Hour: The Films and Photographs of William Grayden and the History of the 'Warburton Range Controversy' of 1957
A Thematic Analysis of Indigenous Students’ Experiences with Indigenization at a Canadian Post-secondary Institution: Paradoxes, Potential, and Moving Forward Together
Using an Indigenous students perspective to look at Indigenization within Canadian universities.
Then and Now, For the Land
"Then One Day We Create Something Unexpected": Tribalography's Decolonizing Strategies in LeAnne Howe's Evidence of Red
Theory and Practice in the Government of Alberta's Consultation Policy
Therapeutic Nations: Healing in an Age of Indigenous Human Rights
There Is No Longer Time: Mphatheleni Makaulule on the agency—and urgency—of women’s leadership
There is No Respectful Way to Kill an Animal
"There's a Treatment Centre Where the Residential School Used to be": Alcoholism, Acculturation, and Barriers to Indigenous Health in Eden Robinson's Monkey Beach
"There's nothing not complicated about being Indian:" American Indian Student Experiences in a Mainstream Middle School
"There's Something in the Water": Salmon Runs and Settler Colonialism on the Columbia River
These Bones Are Read: The Science and Politics of Ancient Native America
Thèses / Dissertations
"They are not Delighted in Baubles, but in Usefull Things": Native American Commercial Mentalities and the Gift/Exchange Dichotomy in the Early Colonial South East
"They are Strongly Attached to the Country of Rivers, Lakes, and Forests": The Social Landscapes of the Northwest
They Called Me Number One: Secrets and Survival at an Indian Residential School
"They Don't Know Me!" Counterportraits of Indigenous and Non-Indigenous Women Distance Learners Living in North Central Arizona
"They Spoke Only In Sighs": The Loss of Leaders and Life In Wendake, 1633-1639".
Think Indigenous [11: Pam Palmater]
Thinking About Aboriginal KT: Learning From the Network Environments for Aboriginal Health Research British Columbia (NEARBC)
Thinking about Service Delivery: Aboriginal Providers, Universal Providers, and the Role of Friendship Centres
Focuses on three research questions: which type of organization should supply services? what links or partnerships could be constructed between organizations in order to increase overall capacity and effectiveness? and what part could Friendship Centres play? Chapter from Exploring the Urban Landscape edited by Jerry P. White and Jodi Bruhn. Originally presented at the third annual Aboriginal Policy Research Conference, 2009.
Third International Conference on Racisms in the New World Order: Realities of Culture, Colour and Identity: Conference Proceedings
Third National Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Blood Borne Viruses and Sexually Transmissible Infections Strategy, 2010–2013
Thirst: Educational Resource
Thirteen Moons Curriculum: Ojibway, Cree, Mohawk: Practitioner Guide LBS Levels 2 and 3
"[This] I Know From My Grandfather": The Battle for Admissibility of Indigenous Oral History as Proof of Tribal Land Claims
This Is What It Means to Say Phoenix, Arizona
This Is What It Means to Say Reservation Cinema: Making Cinematic Indians in Smoke Signals
“This Spurious Philanthropy”: Indian Policy, Food and Canada’s North-West As Discussed in the Senate of Canada in 1886
"The evidence provided to this commission provides an interesting record of thoughts by the government and (mostly non-Indigenous, male) experts about food, Indigenous people and the Canadian North-West ten years after the near-extinction of the buffalo."
‘This Tobacco Has Always Been Here for Us,’ American Indian Views of Smoking: Risk and Protective Factors
Thomas Flanagan on the Stand: Revisiting Métis Land Claims and the Lists of Rights in Manitoba
[Thomas King and the Stairwell Interview: The Inconvenient Indian]
[Thomas King: The Inconvenient Indian]
Those Who Dwell Below: Educator's Resource
Pre-reading activities, chapter-by-chapter discussion questions, and extension activities geared toward Grades 9 to 12.
Those Who Take Us Away: Abusive Policing and Failures in Protection of Indigenous Women and Girls in Northern British Columbia, Canada
Thoughts on Métis Economic Development
Thoughts on Twenty Years of Native Language Revitalization
Threads of Visual Culture: Métis Art and Identity in Ontario
"Three Hundred Leagues Further Into The Wilderness" Conceptualizations of the Nonhuman During Wendat-French Culture Contact, 1609-49: Implications for Environmental Social Work and Social Justice
Three Inquiries to be Held into Lac La Ronge First Nation Claims
Three Times "Geronimo!": the Evolution of a Frontier Symbol
Through Native Lenses: American Indian Vernacular Photographies and Performances of Memories, 1890-1940
Through Our Eyes: Expressions of First Nations, Métis, and Inuit Cultures: Grade 9 NAC 10
Uses video clips by five Indigenous artists as a starting point for discussion, writing and research activities.