He returned to Canada and became a prominent Métis activist, contributing regularly to newspapers and magazines and appearing on Canadian Broadcasting Corporation radio shows.[2] In 1969, he was elected president of the Metis Association of Saskatchewan.[3]
Adams' intellectual influences include Malcolm X whom he saw lecture at Berkeley, and the general radical environment of that institution during the 1960s. He was the maternal great grandson of Louis Riel's lieutenant Maxime Lepine who fought in the North-West Rebellion of 1885.
^"Howard Adams]". Encyclopaedia of Saskatchewan. Archived from the original on 30 June 2017. Retrieved 26 April 2013.
^Voth, Daniel (Fall 2018). "Order Up!The Decolonizing Politics of Howard Adams and Maria Campbell with a Side of Imagining Otherwise". Native American and Indigenous Studies. 5 (2): 16. doi:10.5749/natiindistudj.5.2.0016. S2CID159082620.
^Weinstein, John (2007). Quiet Revolution West: The Rebirth of Metis Nationalism. Fifth House Publishers. p. 30. ISBN9781897252215.
Hartmut Lutz, Murray Hamilton and Donna Heimberker. "Howard Adams: OTAPAWY! The Life of a Metis Leader in his Own Words and in Those of his Contemporaries." Saskatoon: Gabriel Dumont Institute, 2005. ISBN0-920915-74-4
Hartmut Lutz: Identity as Interface: Fact and Fiction in the Autobiographical Writings of Howard Adams, in idem, Contemporary achievements. Contextualizing Canadian Aboriginal literatures. Studies in anglophone literatures and cultures, 6. Wißner, Augsburg 2015, pp 222 – 240
Hartmut Lutz: Not "Neither-Nor" but "Both, and More?" A Transnational Reading of Chicana and Metis Autobiografictions by Sandra Cisneros and Howard Adams, in idem, Contemporary achievements. Contextualizing Canadian Aboriginal literatures. Studies in anglophone literatures and cultures, 6. Wißner, Augsburg 2015, pp 241 – 260