Indigenous Rights Movements & the Law
Cut to the Chase Iron Eyes
Cut to the Chase is the place to hear hard hitting analysis from the host on cutting edge topics of the day. The guests play a significant role in telling stories of varied perspectives including all things Indigenous intersecting with mainstream topics of import. It's live, it's news that needs to…
All My Relations
All My Relations is a team of folks who care about representations, and how Native peoples are represented in mainstream media. Between us we have decades of experience working in and with Native communities, and writing and speaking about issues of representation.
Red Media — Common Notions Press
Red Media’s mission is to nourish, sustain, and build Indigenous movements that not only protect life on a planet on the verge of ecological collapse but also provide models for a future premised on justice. The stakes are clear: it’s decolonization or extinction.
Native Americans 'Disproportional’ Victims of Fatal Police Shootings - The Crime Report
“Proportionally, Native Americans are the most likely racial group to be killed by the police,” says a report by the Lakota People's Law Project. Native American men are also imprisoned at four times the rate of white men, and Native American women at six times the rate of white women.
Tribal Consultation RCR Workshop Video Recording - University of Arizona
Provides an introduction to policies, resources, and best practices for UA researchers interested in conducting collaborative research and/or educational engagement with Native Nations/Indigenous communities
Unworthy republic : the dispossession of Native Americans and the road to Indian territory - Claudio Saunt
"A masterful and unsettling history of the forced migration of 80,000 Native Americans across the Mississippi River in the 1830s. On May 28, 1830, Congress authorized the expulsion of indigenous peoples from the East to territories west of the Mississippi River. Over the next decade, Native Americans saw their homelands and possessions stolen through fraud, intimidation, and murder. Thousands lost their lives. In this powerful, gripping book, Claudio Saunt upends the common view that "Indian Removal" was an inevitable chapter in US expansion across the continent. Instead, Saunt argues that it was a contested political act-resisted by both indigenous peoples and US citizens-that passed in Congress by a razor-thin margin. In telling the full story of this systematic, state-sponsored theft, Saunt reveals how expulsion became national policy, abetted by southern slave owners and financed by Wall Street. Moving beyond the familiar story of the Trail of Tears, Unworthy Republic offers a fast-paced yet deeply researched account of unbridled greed, government indifference, and administrative incompetence. The consequences of this vast transfer of land and wealth still resonate today"--