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You are viewing titles for UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA SANTA BARBARA in the Native American studies available through the UMI Dissertations & Thesis Gradwoorks site
 
Chimariko in areal and typological perspective
Bridging generations: American Indian family perceptions of home/school partnerships
 
Religion in contemporary Native America: Traditional practices, modern identities
Denying religion: French and Native American spiritual crossroads in seventeenth-century New France
 
Aspect and aspectual interfaces in South Conchucos Quechua: The emergence of grammatical systems
Claiming dignity, reconfiguring rights: Gender, youth, and indigenous-led politics in southern Mexico
 
Historical conflict in present-day interaction: Discursive social action and decision-making for the future of the Chehalis River watershed
The Franciscan friars of New Mexico: Three borderlands trails to Vatican II, 1957-1985
 
The Thin Red Line: Native American culture bearers, memory and the museum
Balancing Values: Re-Viewing the 1882 Bombardment Of Angoon Alaska From a Tlingit Religious and Cultural Perspective
 
Yuki Grammar in its Areal Context with sketches of Huchnom and Coast Yuki
Directional Reference, Discourse, and Landscape in Ahtna
 
A Pedagogical Grammar of Ventureno Chumash: Implementing Grammatical Theory in Grammar Writing
Behavioral Adaptations and Mobility of Early Holocene Hunter-Gatherers, Santa Cruz Island, California