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Results for "Indigenous"
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Native Hawaiian Responses to 18th and 19th Century Leisure Discourses and their Haunting Consequences
Download2015-01-21
SSHRC Awarded IDG 2015: The project focuses on historical analysis of indigenous Hawaiians' [Kanaka Maoli] submissions to Hawaiian language newspapers (1834 - 1948). In 19th century Hawaii, missionaries' leisure-discourses were intimately connected with colonial structures and judgments about
by missionaries. The intellectual outcomes will include: Demonstrate the role of leisure discourses in colonial misrepresentations of Indigenous practices and Kanaka Maoli use of cultural practices to maintain well-being and resist colonialization. Materially contribute to the Hawaiian-language
intellectual commons through search strategies and translation; Historical analysis has implications for current tourism/leisure practices and self-determination actions relevant for other Indigenous communities.
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Theorising African Immigrant Children's Mathematics Learning Experiences Through the lens of African Indigenous Knowledge (AIK)
Download2024-03-28
Yaro, Kwesi., Ntarmah, Albert.
Poster presented at the 2024 Faculty of Education Celebrating Socially Transformative Research and Teaching Event
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Night at the Museum Research Expo: Coming Together for the Tłı̨chǫ Cultural Commons Archive
Download2023-01-01
Bourgeois, Rebecca L., Gelderman, Karen
On December 6th and 7th, 2022, the Tłı̨chǫ Government Department of Culture and Lands Protection (DCLP) hosted a two day “Night at the Museum Research Expo.” This event was originally thought of as a way to introduce the Tłı̨chǫ Cultural Commons archival work to the public in Behchokǫ̀, but then...
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2022-08-01
Montgomery, Lindsay M., Supernant, Kisha
reform was most clearly articulated in the use of archaeological geophysics to detect the unmarked graves of incarcerated Indigenous children who died at residential and boarding schools in Canada and the United States. The highly publicized investigation of these schools has brought renewed attention to
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Spring 2019
treat three different types of oil sands tailings to remove bitumen content. Secondly, biostimulation treatment with acetate of the indigenous tailings microbial community was used to treat the bitumen. The presence of bitumen was found to increase the water toxicity. Analysis of the indigenous tailings
tested to remove the cap water turbidity. C. kessleri addition can remove the cap water turbidity effectively in the bench scale experiment, and nutrient addition can remove a comparable level of turbidity possibly by stimulating the growth of the indigenous algal community. B. braunii didn't achieve any
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Fall 2020
ethnographers that sought to preserve Indigenous cultures under the false assumption of disappearance. These discourses continue to have significant relevance today, as Inuit representational organizations, such as Inuit Tapiriit Kanatami (ITK), partner with the Government of Canada to develop documents like
Igloolik, Nunavut (July 2018). The dissertation advocates for a methodological shift in Indigenous literary studies that prioritizes consultation with artists, the importance of fostering relationships, and working outside the physical confines of texts. Drawing from Kim TallBear’s methodology of
in Indigenous literatures to use non-textual methods.
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2022-04-12
fermented foods”, but also identifies opportunities that relate to questions that are facilitated by this graphical presentation: on the origin and purpose of food fermentation, which fermented foods represent “indigenous” foods, differences and similarities in the assembly of microbial communities in
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Women are Discriminated Against within Politics in Indigenous Communities Because of their Gender
DownloadFall 2017
The purpose of this study was to prove that women are discriminated against within politics in Indigenous Communities because of their gender. It will demonstrate how the Cree people historically were once an egalitarian society. Even though women were not often seen in leadership roles, such as
– Oral history and Interviews • Indigenous Feminism • Literature Review These methodologies and theories were chosen, as they best reflected the philosophies of the Cree people in the Treaty 8 area. In this study, three individual members of Horse Lake First Nation were interviewed to demonstrate how