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Indigenous Learning
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  1. Canadian Polar Commission
    Media Profile in Sources

    Resource Type: Organization
  2. Connexions
    Volume 6, Number 2 - April 1981 - Urban Core/Milieu Urbain

    Resource Type: Serial Publication (Periodical)
    Published: 1981
  3. Connexions
    Volume 8, Number 3-4 - Winter 1983/84 - Native Issues - A Digest of Resources and Groups for Social

    Resource Type: Serial Publication (Periodical)
    Published: 1984
  4. The Gaia Atlas of First Peoples
    Resource Type: Book
    Published: 1990
    Entries on indigenous peoples from around the globe, focusing on three main areas: their way of life, the present crisis, and the future.
  5. Healing the Dark Legacy of Native American Families
    Resource Type: Article
    Published: 2014
    Native American Youth and Family Center (NAYA) - educational issues among indigenous families.
  6. Karl Marx and the Iroquois
    An essay on Marx's Ethnological Notebooks

    Resource Type: Article
    Franklin Rosemont delves into Marx's Ethnological Notebooks and examines their significance and relevance towards today's communist movement.
  7. Lakehead University
    Media Profile in Sources

    Resource Type: Organization
  8. Research is Ceremony
    Indigenous Research Methods

    Resource Type: Book
    Published: 2008
    Wilson describes a research paradigm shared by indigenous scholars in Canada and Australia and demonstrates how this paradigm can be put into practice.
  9. 'Toronto' Is An Iroquois Word
    Resource Type: Article
    Published: 2012
    The author tries to make the case that southern Ontario is historically Haudenosaunee (Iroqouis) territory. She conflates the term 'Iroquoian,' meaning the larger language and cultural grouping, with the narrower term 'Iroquois,' which refers specifically to the Five (later Six) Nations of the Iroquois Confederacy. In doing so, she tries to make it seem that the Huron who inhabited much of Southern Ontario until they were invaded and destroyed by the Haudenosaunee Confederacy in the 1640s, were just another branch of the Iroquois Confederacy. She dismisses the Anishinabe, who moved into southern Ontario after defeating the Iroquois Confederacy in the late 1600s, as latercomers whose oral histories, and claims to Southern Ontario should not be taken seriously.
  10. Wasáse
    Indigenous Pathways of Action and Freedom

    Resource Type: Book
    Published: 2005
    An integration of anarchist thinking with indigenous theory.


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