Search
Skip to Search Results- 43Campbell, Sandy
- 28Parlee, Brenda
- 27GAPSSHRC
- 22Dorgan, Marlene
- 21Tjosvold, Lisa
- 16Karsgaard, Carrie; Mackay, Mackenzie; Catholique, Alexandria
- 364Graduate and Postdoctoral Studies (GPS), Faculty of
- 364Graduate and Postdoctoral Studies (GPS), Faculty of/Theses and Dissertations
- 83Toolkit for Grant Success
- 68Toolkit for Grant Success/Successful Grants (Toolkit for Grant Success)
- 44Tracking Change
- 42University of Alberta Library
- 366Thesis
- 144Research Material
- 68Report
- 64Article (Published)
- 46Conference/Workshop Presentation
- 33Image
Results for "Indigenous"
-
Views in Hudson’s Bay (1825) and Peter Rindisbacher: Constructions of Indigenous and non-Indigenous Culture in the Red River Settlement
DownloadSpring 2017
Within the Views in Hudson’s Bay (1825) print series are six hand-tinted lithographs depicting indigenous and non-indigenous culture in the Red River Settlement. The images engage with visual language from eighteenth- and nineteenth-century print series and travel books that construct North
-
Finding More Canadian Indigenous Health Articles Using Search Filters
2015-02-20
Dorgan, Marlene, Campbell, Sandy, Tjosvold, Lisa
This presentation describes 12 provincial and territorial database search filters, which were created to retrieve articles about Indigenous people from OVID Medline.
-
Participatory action research, learning in small peasant resistance and the politics of rural dispossession in Indonesia
DownloadFall 2018
The agro-extractive regime pursued by the corporatized state and the pervasive expansion of capital accumulation has turned the rural frontier of Indonesia into an agrarian war zone. This is marked by the proliferation of serious challenges by small peasants and indigenous peoples who are ‘in the
way’ of the neoliberal state apparatus and market imperatives being imposed by a globalizing colonial capitalism. It would therefore be a political if not ethical oversight to remain oblivious to the perseverance of small peasant and indigenous ways of learning in resistance to the violence of
), while engaging in and seeking to understand the multiple modes of small peasant and indigenous learning and knowledge production processes embedded in resistance to DD in rural Indonesia. The study derives its’ primary significance from practical PAR interventions in anti-land dispossession struggles in
-
Our Stories: Sharing the Indigenous Edmonton Experience
2017-01-01
Everyone has a story to tell. Lese Skidmore of EPL will give an overview of how they are working with individuals to share their stories via digital story telling: a short personal story created by combining a recorded narrative with images, music, or other sounds. Please see link to related item...
-
Fall 2023
was multifaceted. Since Indigenous women experience heart illness at a higher rate than non-Indigenous women and Indigenous men, I engaged with community members in discussions about some potential research in this area. Alongside community members it was determined that the research purpose was to
-
2019-08-22
Young, T. Kue, Bjerregaard, Peter
"Despite the importance of indigenous people in the Arctic, there is no accurate estimate of their size and distribution. We defined indigenous people as those groups represented by the 'permanent participants' of the Arctic Council. The census in Canada, Russia and the United States records status
as an indigenous person. In Greenland, a proxy measure is place of birth supplemented by other information. For the Nordic countries we utilized a variety of sources including registered voters’ lists of the various Sami parliaments and research studies that established Sami cohorts. Overall, we
estimated that there were about 1.13 million indigenous people in the northern regions of the 8 Member States of the Arctic Council. There were 8,100 Aleuts in Alaska and the Russian North; 32,400 Athabaskans in Alaska and northern Canada; 145,900 Inuit in Alaska, northern Canada and Greenland; 76,300 Sami
-
After This, Therefore, Because of This: Refusing Settler Immunity & Abolishing Indigenous Criminality
DownloadFall 2019
According to Statistics Canada, in 2016/2017 Indigenous peoples accounted for 28% of admissions to provincial/territorial prisons and 27% for federal prisons, while representing only 4.1% of the Canadian adult population. The majority of analyses drawn from these statistics continue to follow a
colonial legacy and ongoing settler-colonial project, which is undercut by a certain set of logics that require the obfuscation of Indigenous presence(s). This informs my contention that, contrary to popular belief, the prison system is in fact not broken, but continues to perform the exact function it was
designed to perform in the first place: the ongoing dispossession of indigenous bodies and lands, as well as a suppression of their claims to sovereignty. Overall, I am to situate the state, rather than indigeneity, in its criminality, by showing how the universalism of Canada’s sovereign ideal is
-
Fall 2020
Helicobacter pylori (Hp) infection has an elevated prevalence in northern Indigenous communities in Canada. This thesis investigates social inequities in the Hp-associated disease burden within Indigenous communities in the Northwest Territories and Yukon. I examined how deprivation indicators
households, and in men relative to women, though there was insufficient statistical precision to conclude that the observed difference in the trend was beyond what would be expected from random variation. Thus, the Hp-associated disease burden seems related to social and gender inequities within Indigenous
-
Language attitudes and opportunities for speaking a minority language: what lies ahead for Ozelonacaxtla Totonac?
DownloadFall 2009
The present research describes the sociolinguistic situation in the minority indigenous community of San Juan Ozelonacaxtla in the state of Puebla, Mexico. Both Ozelonacaxtla Totonac and Spanish are spoken in the speech community. However, some bilingual parents use only Spanish in the home
. Parents claim they teach their children Spanish because it is more useful than Ozelonacaxtla Totonac, it enables their children to avoid discrimination associated with speaking an indigenous language, it is necessary for their children to do well in school, and it allows for more economic mobility. These