Results 221 to 230 of about 345,729 (263)
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Study Challenges Views on Alcohol Consumption in Native Americans

AJN, American Journal of Nursing, 2016
But phone survey data may not have revealed the full picture.
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Native American women and agriculture: A Seneca case study

Sex Roles, 1977
This study examines the impact of European invasion on the mode of production, household lives, and ideology of one group of Native American women, the Seneca. Seneca women had high public status, a balanced division of labor, ownership of the land, and control over the means of agricultural production.
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Native American Drinking: A Neglected Subject of Study and Research

Journal of Drug Education, 1991
Although Native Americans are plagued by high rates of alcoholism, violence, suicide and early death, these social and clinical problems are usually given little more than cursory treatment in textbooks. A content analysis of twenty-six textbooks on alcoholism and substance misuse revealed that only four provided a detailed discussion of Native ...
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Contemporary Native American Projects: Four Studies

2018
We discuss the distinct cultural and philosophical context for the new architecture that has emerged on Native lands within the USA during the past two decades. As individual tribes can now employ their own architects and contractors, a more sophisticated design sensibility has emerged that seeks to reconcile form and content in a manner that is ...
Joy Monice Malnar, Frank Vodvarka
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Native American studies and the white man's burden

Reviews in Anthropology, 1976
Murray L. Wax and Robert W. Buchanan, eds. Solving “The Indian Problem “: The White Man's Burdensome Business. New York: New Viewpoints. Franklin Watts, Inc., 1975. 237 pp. Selected reading and index. $12.50.
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Anthropological Studies of Native American Place Naming

American Indian Quarterly, 1997
ion in place naming was "a cultural index to some degree" with more "evolved" cultures displaying a higher level of abstraction (1922:182). Although his arguments on this point are sketchy and unconvincing, they represent an early attempt to develop a cross-cultural theory of place-naming.
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Native American Studies

2007
GERRY R. COX, JAC D. BULK
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Native American Studies

2005
Clara Sue Kidwell, Alan Velie
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