The traveling exhibit “¡Taíno Vive!” comes to Connecticut from The Smithsonian, with new material added from Yale’s catalog.
Kwigillingok, Alaska, has long grappled with erosion and flooding. Residents want to move to higher ground, further inland, ...
Kathleen DuVal is a history professor at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill and the author of the Pulitzer Prize ...
Iinnii are really at the center of everything for us,” “Bring Them Home” narrator, Lily Gladstone, told HuffPost.
Several dozen tribal radio stations were caught in the crossfire of federal funding cuts this fall. NPR's Frank Langfitt visited one station in Colorado navigating its survival.
Several dozen tribal radio stations were caught in the crossfire of federal funding cuts this fall. NPR's Frank Langfitt ...
It’s easy to imagine American frontier folk felling trees to build log cabins. But what about homes made from sod, clay—or even ice? Long before colonization, Indigenous communities built and designed ...
The Tesuque Pueblo’s Camel Rock may or may not have inspired the look of Steven Spielberg’s E.T. character, as the story goes. But the mushroom-shaped rock formation in the Sangre de Cristo Mountains, ...
Native homelands have intertwined with the people for millennia and connect them to the land, the water and all living things. Amy Cordalis has watched the Klamath River reclaim its flow and says ...
Even though Native American Heritage Month is coming to a close, it is still a powerful reminder of the deep Indigenous roots in our state. It is important to remember the significance of Native ...
A wave of high-end residential burglaries across southeastern Wisconsin has prompted a coordinated law enforcement response and drawn political attention at both the local and national levels. The ...