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April, 2024
Euchee culinary traditions, subsistence whaling in Alaska and young gardeners are on The Menu, Native America Calling’s regular feature on food sovereignty.
As a Native psychiatrist, Dr. Richard Laughter breaks down accessibility barriers by blending Native cultural practices with Western care.
Oklahoma’s creation must be taught alongside all the grim and dark history of U.S. tribal relations.
Native Guitars Tour is heading up a two-day music and fashion presentation in New Mexico.
George Goode explains the significance of farrier education through the Native American Horse Education Foundation, which provides courses to Native communities.
We are in the midst of a new surge of Native writing talent.
The early bond between Native people and horses was both technical and spiritual.
AI is advancing fast, and Native experts are expressing the need for policy and legal safeguards to make sure it doesn’t trample Native values.
Show some love for the Earth that sustains us. Happy Earth Day!
Cherokee Nation is leading by example to foster a sustainable future, both locally and globally, for generations to come.
Native people face a six-fold increased risk of flash floods because of climate change in the next two years, according to a new study.
Native people die by suicide at rates higher than any other racial or ethnic group, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.
Cody Desautel, president of the Intertribal Timber Council and executive director of the Confederated Tribes of the Colville Reservation, testifies about federal forest management.
The House Subcommittee on Federal Lands holds a hearing to discuss draft legislation on forest management.
The murders of three Navajo men by white high school students touched off a series of racially-fueled conflicts in a border town in New Mexico.
Native people are among those with the lowest rate of vaccinations, whether it’s for flu, measles, COVID-19, or hepatitis B.
An estimated 18.1 percent of Arizona residents have experienced long COVID — a condition broadly defined by symptoms that continue to develop weeks, months or years after COVID-19 infection.
Native drone pilots are building careers using drones for scoping out landscapes for construction, searching for lost hikers, and even assessing potentially sacred areas.
Native sisters, a Native artist’s art installation and a tribe’s fight against an oil pipeline are the subject of new films.
Sending best wishes to accountants everywhere on Tax Day!
Osteoarthritis affects millions of people nationwide, and unfortunately American Indians have among the highest prevalence in the country.
Citing a troubling disparity for self-harm among Native youth, two tribes are suing the country’s most prominent social media companies.
The famed criminal known as “QAnon Shaman” will not be going back to Washington, for now — at least not in any official capacity.
Join Ojibwe writer Marcie Rendon, Lakota humorist Tiffany Midge, author Kimberly Blaeser and poet Kinsale Drake in celebration of National Poetry Month.
Lawmakers wanted to talk about the problems of foreign criminal cartels operating on Indigenous lands, but tribal leaders came to Capitol Hill seeking solutions.
It’s the time of year when Native nerds, cosplayers, comic geeks and gamers assemble for the first and biggest convention devoted to them.
Join Native America Calling to examine the fallout from unfounded claims made by high-ranking politicians and what recourse tribes have to counter them.
“The idea of being an astronaut hadn’t even entered my mind at this point,” Marine Col. Nicole Mann told college students.
Numerous studies over the years point out the overrepresentation of Native women in U.S. prisons. Even Native girls are incarcerated at higher rates.
For Native peoples, maintaining our language is synonymous with sustaining our identity and our very way of life.
All across the country, tribes are working to find the most promising opioid treatments funded by dozens of settlements with pharmaceutical giants.
Most tribes have important traditional connections to the stars and other celestial bodies in the night sky.
A crime spree by two Ute youths in 1923 escalated into a mob of settlers bent on suppressing the nearby Ute and Paiute populations in what is now Utah.
Join Native America Calling to speak with two passionate Native language scholars about the dedication it takes to make a difference.
The most powerful earthquake ever recorded in North America struck 75 miles south of Anchorage in Alaska in March 1964.
Bestselling Blackfeet writer Stephen Graham Jones caps off his horror trilogy with The Angel of Indian Lake.
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