![]() ![]() ![]() The meaning of motherhood among the Kabyle Berber, Indigenous People of North Africa - "We practically lived off the land": Generational changes in food acquisition patterns among First Nations mothers and grandmothers - Risk and resistance: Creating maternal risk through imposed biomedical 'safety' in the post-colonial Indigenous Philippines - Indigenous midwifery as an expression of sovereignty - Stories of mothers living with HIV+ in Kibera, a mega-slum in Sub-Saharan Africa - Towards the wellbeing of Aboriginal mothers and their families: You can't mandate time - The impact of sexual violence on Indigenous motherhood in Guatemala - Camera, a collective, and a critical concern: Feminist research aimed at capturing new images of Aboriginal motherhood - Storying the untold: Indigenous motherhood and street sex work - Motherhood, policies and tea - The power of ancestral stories on mothers & daughters - Rebirth and renewal: Finding empowerment through Indigenous women's literature - Māori mothering: Repression, resistance and renaissance - Nimâmâsak: The legacy of First Nations women honouring mothers and motherhood - Indigenous principles for single mothering in a fragmented world - Growing up: A dialogue between Kim Anderson and Dawn Memee Lavell-Harvard on personal and professional evolutions in Indigenous motheringĪccess-restricted-item true Addeddate 22:37:57 Associated-names Anderson, Kim, 1964- editor Lavell-Harvard, D. ![]()
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