News

Two North Dakota tribes and a group of tribal citizens have asked the U.S. Supreme Court to keep North Dakota’s district map ...
Photographer and member of the Hassanamisco Nipmuc Band, Scott Quanon Menuhkesu (Strong Hawk) Foster, is sharing glimpses ...
Creighton faculty and students collaborated with Joslyn Art Museum officials to chronicle German Prince Maximilian's and ...
Native Vote. After the Eighth Circuit Court of Appeals reaffirmed its decision to deny voters in seven states the ability to seek fair representation, the Native American Rights Fund and its ...
TOPEKA, Kan. (WIBW) - A Topeka artist, known to infuse her Native American heritage into each piece, is being spotlighted ...
GRAND JUNCTION, Colo. (KJCT) - The history of Mesa County begins in 1881. The area was already inhabited decades before that ...
A trail leading from near St. Louis, Missouri to Natchitoches, Louisiana, teaches us about a race that ruled “the new world” long before people from “the old world” arrived.
The island’s ties to Native American culture were recognised during two days of celebration in St David’s at the weekend. The biannual powwow sought to honour links with Indigenous tribes ...
Native American boarding school funding under scrutiny in lawsuit The lawsuit filed by the Wichita and Washoe tribes demands an accounting of an estimated $23.3 billion in misappropriated funds.
The resolution would also include an apology to tribes, acknowledging that the state discriminated against Native Americans and “attempted to erase Native American history,” the department said.
Two tribal nations filed a lawsuit saying that the federal government used the trust fund money of tribes to pay for boarding schools where generations of Native children were systematically abused.
The lawsuit seeks to compel the United States to release all records to provide accounting for a program that brutalized generations of Native American children and killed more than 5% of them.