We have missed everyone and are looking forward to when we can gather together in person. While each from our own houses and offices all across the lands commonly referred to as Canada, the virtual 20...
Indigenous language learning and revitalization work is necessarily relational and often territorially-based. Across Canada, the US, and the world, a large number of Indigenous communities, organizati...
Indigenous communities, organizations, and individuals work tirelessly to #KeepOurLanguagesStrong. The COVID-19 pandemic was potentially detrimental to Indigenous language revitalization (ILR) as this...
Collectively, the NEȾOLṈEW̱ Partnership is positioned to make great contributions to the field of ILR and the especially to the understanding of adult Indigenous language learning, language revita...
In March 2020, the COVID-19 global health crisis caused disruption to the daily lives and regular practices of most human populations. Indigenous language revitalization (ILR) work is often undertaken...
i-kiyohkātoyāhk (we visit) is a phrase which describes our experience of trying to recreate an online version of our way of life, being together in the language. The following report is our view of ...
Exploring Innovative and Successful Adult Language Learning Methods in Indigenous Communities in Canada and the US. Indigenous peoples have worked for decades to revitalize their languages. Much of th...
Damages done to Indigenous languages occurred due to colonial forces, some of which continue to this day, and many believe efforts to revive them should involve more than Indigenous peoples alone. The...
On the 11th anniversary of the signing of the United Nations Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples (Sept. 13, 2007), the Canadian Commission on UNESCO published a three-page quick-facts and ...