The Medicine Wheel is used in many Indigenous communities across Turtle Island (North America) with many different teachings and symbolisms. The Medicine Wheel is a circle with four equal quadrants representing vast teachings, which are specific to local First Nations, which can used as the conceptual framework as well as theory. Through a rapid narrative review of literature on the Medicine Wheel and associated uses as well as the authors’ Anishinaabe teachings, we examine four research uses of the Medicine Wheel in academics and with Indigenous community research to apply it as a theory, conceptual framework, analysis, and evaluation practices. The Medicine Wheel ontologies and epistemologies lend the teachings to be used as a conceptual ...
This article uses a Medicine Wheel model, a structural social work framework and an anti-oppression ...
This article describes Building A Nation, a store front program located in the heart of the core nei...
Etuaptmumk or Two-Eyed Seeing (E/TES) is foundational in ensuring that Indigenous ways of knowing ar...
In this paper I examine program planning by integrating teachings from traditional First Nations Eld...
The Selected paper investigates the difficulties and examples learned in utilizing an Indigenous res...
This research, which takes place on Treaty 6 lands and involves an Indigenous and decolonized worldv...
This research is an ethnographic study of Native American women\u27s understanding and doing of medi...
This qualitative research study is situated within an Indigenous research methodology. The goal of t...
Indigenous health research should reflect the needs and benefits of the participants and their commu...
Indigenous health research should reflect the needs and benefits of the participants and their communi...
How traditional healing can be enhanced in cities, has been the subject of discussion between myself...
This paper explores from a Mi’kmaq and Aboriginal standpoint foundational knowledge in Indigenous th...
This paper explores from a Mi'kmaq and Aboriginal standpoint foundational knowledge in Indigenous th...
The current state of Aboriginal health is of national concern. Aboriginal people as a population do ...
This article explores the application of two-eyed seeing in the first year of a three-year study abo...
This article uses a Medicine Wheel model, a structural social work framework and an anti-oppression ...
This article describes Building A Nation, a store front program located in the heart of the core nei...
Etuaptmumk or Two-Eyed Seeing (E/TES) is foundational in ensuring that Indigenous ways of knowing ar...
In this paper I examine program planning by integrating teachings from traditional First Nations Eld...
The Selected paper investigates the difficulties and examples learned in utilizing an Indigenous res...
This research, which takes place on Treaty 6 lands and involves an Indigenous and decolonized worldv...
This research is an ethnographic study of Native American women\u27s understanding and doing of medi...
This qualitative research study is situated within an Indigenous research methodology. The goal of t...
Indigenous health research should reflect the needs and benefits of the participants and their commu...
Indigenous health research should reflect the needs and benefits of the participants and their communi...
How traditional healing can be enhanced in cities, has been the subject of discussion between myself...
This paper explores from a Mi’kmaq and Aboriginal standpoint foundational knowledge in Indigenous th...
This paper explores from a Mi'kmaq and Aboriginal standpoint foundational knowledge in Indigenous th...
The current state of Aboriginal health is of national concern. Aboriginal people as a population do ...
This article explores the application of two-eyed seeing in the first year of a three-year study abo...
This article uses a Medicine Wheel model, a structural social work framework and an anti-oppression ...
This article describes Building A Nation, a store front program located in the heart of the core nei...
Etuaptmumk or Two-Eyed Seeing (E/TES) is foundational in ensuring that Indigenous ways of knowing ar...