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- Up one level
- PBS Faces of America: Relationships between Europeans and American Indians (5 min)
PBS FACES OF AMERICA. Relationships between Europeans and American Indians
Aired: 01/20/2010 (5 min)
Louise Erdrich talks about the fractious relationship between European settlers and her American Indian ancestors among the Dakota people and the Ojibwe Nation.
With Henry Louis Gates, Jr.
- PBS Faces of America: The federal government and "the Indian problem" (3 min)
FACES OF AMERICA. The federal government and "the Indian problem"
Aired: 01/20/2010 (3 min)
Louise Erdrich's grandfather led a fight against the American government’s policy of Indian termination from the 1940s to the 1960s. The policy granted Native Americans the rights and privileges of citizenship, but ended the recognition of tribal sovereignty, tax exemption and trusteeship of Indian reservations.
With Henry Louis Gates, Jr.
- Massive Digital Divide for Native Americans is ‘A Travesty’
By Katia Savchuk, May 12, 2011
Perhaps nowhere in the United States does the digital divide cut as wide as in Indian Country. More than 90 percent of tribal populations lack high-speed Internet access, and usage rates are as low as 5 percent in some areas, according to the Federal Communications Commission.
- American Indian Tribes of the Great Basin Region
American Indian Tribes of the Great Basin Region now known as Utah
- PBS Another View. Native Americans
ANOTHER VIEW. Native Americans
Aired: 06/03/2010 (27 min)
On the next Another View, a history lesson on the Cheroenhaka-Nottoway Indian Tribe of Southampton County, Virginia - and how a man named Walter Ashby Plecker forever changed the relationship between Native Americans and African Americans in this part of Virginia.
- PBS We Shall Remain (trailer)
We Shall Remain is a groundbreaking mini-series and provocative multi-media project that establishes Native history as an essential part of American history. Five 90-minute documentaries spanning three hundred years tell the story of pivotal moments in U.S. history from the Native American perspective.
- History
- Youth
- Standing Rock
- On October 12, observe Indigenous Peoples’ Day
Monday may be the federally recognized holiday of Columbus Day, but millions across the country will instead observe Indigenous Peoples’ Day, now officially observed in some states and cities.
- Eliminating Health Disparities Conversations with American Indians and Alaska Natives
Conversations with American Indians and Alaska Natives Michael E. Bird Malcolm Bowekaty Linda Burhansstipanov Patricia Longley Cochran Pamela J. Everingham Michele Suina ETR Associates, Santa Cruz, California
- Lumbee Indians (Malinda Maynor)
- Ong and Ong, AIAN Underrepresentation in the ACS
AIAN Underrepresentation in the ACS
Jonathan Ong and Paul Ong
November 19, 2012
Los Angeles American Indian and Alaska Native Project
Technical Memo 5:
UCLA American Indian Studies Center
- David Lynch Foundation programs for American Indians
- NPR - Many Native American Communities Struggle With Effects Of Heroin Use
NPR Morning Edition Many Native American Communities Struggle With Effects Of Heroin Use May 20, 2015 3:21 AM ET from KJZZ, Laurel Morales
- Oregon Tribe: Armed Group 'Desecrating' Their Land
Oregon Tribe: Armed Group 'Desecrating' Their Land Burns, Ore. — Jan 7, 2016, Terrence Petty and Manuel Valdes, Associated Press ABC News
- NPR - A 'Wisdom-Keeper' Draws From A Deep Well Of Navajo Culture
A 'Wisdom-Keeper' Draws From A Deep Well Of Navajo Culture NPR Morning Edition, January 12, 2016
- The State of Things - The American Indian Experience
The American Indian Experience "The State of Things" WUNC-FM, November 10, 2010. You may know that millions of natives were already in North America when Columbus "discovered" the New World, but you may not know that American Indian history is a story of a complicated and diverse people with cultures and societies more sophisticated than the European settlers ever knew. Host Frank Stasio honors National American Indian Heritage Month with Brandi Brooks, program coordinator for the American Indian Center at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, and Theda Perdue, professor of Southern Culture at UNC-Chapel Hill and co-author of the book "North American Indians: A Very Short Introduction" (Oxford University Press/2010).
- How One Chief Justice Used The Church To Dispossess Natives From Their Land
WUNC, The State of Things, Dana Terry and Frank Stasio, 12/4/2018 Immigration attorney George Pappas traces the impact of religious doctrine on land rights in his new book “The Literary and Legal Genealogy of Native American Dispossession: The Marshall Trilogy Cases” (Routledge/2017). Pappas begins his analysis in the 1400s when the pope gave the kings of Spain and Portugal the right to invade, capture and subdue any pagans who were considered enemies of Christ. Early settlers were allowed to enslave them and take dominion over their land. This religious directive became the Doctrine of Discovery accepted as law by the Europeans that colonized America. This doctrine was later referred to in multiple legal rulings proceeded over by Supreme Court Chief Justice John James Marshall to dispossess Native Americans from their land. Pappas talks to Frank Stasio about the three central rulings that govern Native American land rights and why he believes they are so problematic. They are also joined by Janelle Adair. She's a Cherokee storyteller and a member of the United Keetoowah Band Cherokee Indians of Oklahoma. She shares stories of how being forced from their land resulted in the massive loss of language, culture, and cultural connection.
- Exploring Carolina’s American Indian connections
Exploring Carolina’s American Indian connections. Scott Jared, The Well, Thursday, November 19th, 2020.
With an emphasis on listening to North Carolina’s Indigenous population, the Commission on History, Race and a Way Forward is focusing on Carolina’s historical and current connections to American Indians.
- United American Indians of New England
UAINE is a Native-led organization of Native people and our supporters who fight back against racism and for the freedom of Leonard Peltier and other political prisoners. We support Indigenous struggles, not only in New England but throughout the Americas.
- 11-26-2020 National Day of Mourning Livestream
The livestream and pre-recorded content for the National Day of Mourning on November 26, 2020 can be viewed beginning at approximately 12 noon EST via the United American Indians of New England (UAINE) website, at the UAINE facebook group, on Youtube, and at the hate5six website.
- For Native Peoples, Thanksgiving Isn't A Celebration. It's A National Day Of Mourning
Nov. 25, 2020
Here & Now's Tonya Mosley talks to Kisha James, the granddaughter of one of the founders of the "National Day of Mourning," which is honored every Thanksgiving in Plymouth, Massachusetts. Includes a link to James' grandfather's speech, "The Suppressed Speech of Wamsutta (Frank B.) James, Wampanoag.", http://www.uaine.org/suppressed_speech.htm
- The Supreme Court Decision That Could Return Half Of Oklahoma To Native Americans (16 min)
Produced by Kathryn Fink for WAMU 1A, July 8, 2019. Host Joshua Johnson soke with journalist Rebecca Nagle, a citizen of Cherokee Nation in Oklahoma, and the host of Crooked Media podcast, about an upcoming U.S. Supreme Court decision on Carpenter v. Murphy. The case hinges on a murder trial, early American history and varied interpretations of tribal land rights.
- NIH-NCI Native Outreach 1999
A report to American Indian, Alaska Native, and Native Hawaiian Communities. National Institutes of Health National Cancer Institute Office of Special Populations Research. Publication #98-4341, March 1999.
- Prominent American Indians
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- Founded at UNC, Alpha Pi Omega — the country's oldest Indigenous sorority — turns 28
Emily Shih, Daily Tar Heel, August 28, 2022
The country’s oldest Indigenous sorority — Alpha Pi Omega (APiO) — founded its first chapter, UNC's Alpha chapter, in 1994, and now represents more than 130 tribes across the years and has 24 chapters chartered nationwide.
- SACIE
State Advisory Council on American Indian Education
North Carolina General Statute 115C-210 established an advisory council to the State Board of Education (SBE) to be known as the "State Advisory Council on Indian Education" in 1987. Subsequently, the SBE developed a policy to implement the establishment of the Council as an advisory body to the SBE on matters on Indian education.