The Indigenous Walking Tour is back for Native American History Month!
The presence of Native & Indigenous voices at Harvard has seen a sharp rise in visibility with the addition of more faculty, students, and staff. The Harvard Indigenous Walking Tour is meant to highlight the community at-large and share the important ways that relationships with Native & Indigenous people have shaped the university.
Participants will be guided in and out of Harvard Yard to places that have significant meaning to both Harvard's history...
Harvard Diversity Discussions hosted by the Harvard Asian American Alumni Alliance (H4A), Native American Alumni of Harvard University (NAAHU), Harvard Kennedy School Women's Network (HKSWN), Harvard Kennedy School New England Alumni Association (HKSNEAA), Massachusetts Asian American and Pacific Islanders Commission (AAPIC), and Harvard Women in Defense, Diplomacy, and Development (W3D) Join us in a group discussion of shared experiences and personal opinions (with no presentations or breakouts) on Cultural Pedagogy: How race matters in a classroom Organized by Jenny Korn (MPP '98...
Study Group with Judith LeBlanc: Why Are Native Peoples Leading the Struggles Versus Fossil Fuel Extraction?
In this session, we will explore how Natives are constructing a sustainable, regenerative economic systems in which sovereignty is at the center of responding to climate chaos and exploitation of Mother Earth by extractive fossil fuel industries.
Judith will be joined by Faith Spotted Eagle, Oceti Sakowin Traditional Leader, Yankton Sioux Tribe
Faith has long been a front-line activist leader in many efforts...
“Foregrounding Indigenous Voices and Perspectives at The Met,” the upcoming Ellen Wayles Randolph Coolidge Lecture in American Art by Patricia Marroquin Norby (Purépecha), Associate Curator of Native American Art, The Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York.
Frank Waln is an award winning Sicangu Lakota Hip Hop artist and music producer from the Rosebud Reservation in South Dakota. A recipient of the Gates Millennium Scholarship, Waln attended Columbia College Chicago where he received a BA in Audio Arts and Acoustics. Waln’s awards include three Native American Music Awards, the National Center for American Indian Enterprise Development 2014 Native American 40 Under 40, the 2014 Chicago Mayor’s Award for Civic Engagement, and the 2016 3Arts Grant for Chicago Artists. He has been featured in Buzzfeed, The Fader, Playboy, Vibe, NPR, ESPN, and...
Join DRCLAS and HUNAP for this in-person film screening of "River of Gold," followed by a discussion with Director Sarah duPont and Brazilian experts Cesar Diniz, Raoni Rajão, and Luiz Eloy Terena on the topics of who profits from illegal gold mining in the Amazon and the consequences of mining on public health, the environment, and Indigenous rights.
Mark Trahant, editor-at-large of Indian Country Today: Why is the Native Vote important? What is happening on the ground in Indian Country in the 2022 elections? What...