Welcome Stranger: Tourism Development Among the Shuswap People of the South-Central Interior of British Columbia, Canada
Welcoming and Navigating Allyship in Indigenous Communities
The Wellbeing of Māori Pre and Post Covid-19 Lockdown in Aotearoa / New Zealand
Reports results of the Te Rangahau o Te Tuakiri Māori me Ngā Waiaro ā-Pūtea/The Māori Identity and Financial Attitudes Study (MIFAS) conducted between April and November, 2020. A total of 3,116 Māori responded.
Wellbeing of Māori Pre and Post COVID-19 Lockdown in Aoteraroa/New Zealand
Western Arctic Women Artists' Perspectives on Education and Art
Western Monkeys, Eastern Coyotes: Trickster Strategies in Resistance
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)
Whakatika: A Survey of Māori Experiences of Racism
Whakatika: How Does Racism Impact on the Health of Black, Indigenous and/or People of Colour Globally: An International Literature Review for the Whakatika Research Project
Whakatika: How Does Racism Impact on the Health of Māori: A National Literature Review for the Whakatika Research Project
What Do You Call an Indian Woman with A Law Degree? Nine Aboriginal Women at The University of Saskatchewan Speak Out
What Makes Us Strong: Urban Aboriginal Perspectives on Wellness and Strength
What Native Looks Like Now: Embodiment in Contemporary Indigenous Art, 1992–Present
History of Art and Architecture Thesis (PhD) -- University of Pittsburgh, 2021.
What's Law Got to Do With It? The Protection of Aboriginal Title in Canada
“What’s on the earth is in the stars; and what’s in the stars is on the earth”: Lakota Relationships with the Stars and American Relationships with the Apocalypse
What "Violent Violets" Want: Female Desire in Contemporary Women's Fiction
What We Heard: Indigenous Peoples and COVID-19
Whatever Happened to the Kanakas?
When Black Lives Matter Meets Indian Country: Using the Cherokee and Chickasaw Nations as Case Studies for Understanding the Evolution of Public History and Interracial Coalition
"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
"When Willow Roots Start to Thaw, People Come Back to Life...": Relations of Chukchi Reindeer Herders to Plants
Examines the relationship between reindeer herders and ethnobotany.
Where Are the Children Buried?
General overview of historical context along with examples of specific schools for illustrative purposes and 'gap analysis' to recommend areas where further research is required. Second part of report is a more detailed summary of information on each school’s location and construction sequence, duration of operation, and reported cemeteries.
Where Do Policy Makers And Politicians Look For Policy Directions?
"Where You Have to Bypass" History, Memory, and Multiple Temporalities of Innu Cultural Landscapes
White Eyes' Lies and the Battle for Dzil Nchaa Si'an
The White Man’s Camera: The National Film Board of Canada and Representations of Indigenous Peoples in Post-War Canada
History Thesis (PhD) -- University of Manitoba, 2021.
White Shadows: The Use of Doppelgangers in Sherman Alexie’s Reservation Blues
Whitehorse Point in Time Count 2021: Community Report
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 are the "Aboriginal Peoples of Canada"? Case Comment on R. v. Desautel, 2021 SCC 17
Who Holds the Frame?: Language as Representation in the Art of Emmi Whitehorse and Maria Hupfield
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 Native Literature?
Why No Iroquois Fiction?
Wilderness Cure: An Exploration of The Blue Jay's Dance, Pilgrim at Tinker Creek, and Refuge
The "Winters" Doctrine: Origin and Development of the Indian Reserved Water Rights Doctrine in its Social and Legal Context, 1880s-1930s
History Thesis (Ph.D.)--University of Oregon, 1997