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+12 +1
The Human Right to Water at Standing Rock
Attacks on the Water Protectors at Standing Rock violate their internationally recognized right to safe water. By Marjorie Cohn.
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+23 +1
Guns, empires and Indians
Multilateral imperial politics triggered an indigenous arms race and led to the violent transformation of Native America. By David J Silverman.
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+10 +1
Can’t Wait Forever
Matt Peterson and Malek Rasamny discuss their new film, The Native and the Refugee, which investigates how the spatial contexts of Native reservations in the U.S. and Palestinian refugee camps in the Middle East incubate resistance to settler colonialism. By Aviva Stahl.
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+21 +1
What Everyone Is Missing About the Dakota Access Pipeline Protests
What the media isn’t telling you. By Admin Tam.
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+19 +1
Trump’s Personal Investments Ride on Completion of Dakota Access Pipeline
Kelcy Warren, CEO of Energy Transfer Partners’s which is building the Dakota Access Pipeline, said he is “100 percent” confident Trump will support it. By Lorraine Chow.
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+11 +1
On the Knife-Edge of Western Globalization: A Stint at Standing Rock
Armed men in jackboots, some masked and toting assault rifles, stand mockingly, defiantly, heavily on the mound of graves – a sacred indigenous burial ground. A site non-natives can understand as similar to Arlington National Cemetery… By Robert Barsocchini.
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+17 +1
Life on the Pine Ridge Native American reservation
Where life expectancy is the second-lowest in the western hemisphere and 80 percent of people are unemployed. By Patrick Strickland. (Nov. 2, 2016)
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+21 +1
[Militarized police] and [Standing Rock] protesters face off at Backwater Bridge
Pipeline protesters attempted to remove burned out vehicles blocking the Backwater Bridge on Highway 1806, which led to an hours-long standoff with police using water cannons to repel protesters on [a below freezing] Sunday night. By Caroline Grueskin.
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+21 +1
Stadium Pow Wow
A Tribe Called Red
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+22 +1
In photos: Standing Rock digs in
The encampment set up to protest a pipeline in North Dakota is now more of a small town, and it’s not going anywhere. By Hilary Beaumont.
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+11 +1
America’s ancient cave art
Mysterious drawings, thousands of years old, offer a glimpse of lost Native American cultures and traditions. By John Jeremiah Sullivan. (March, 2011)
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+5 +1
Twenty Photos: My Seven Months of Living at Standing Rock
The community we have built here has taught many how to live a large-scale sustainable, decolonized, anticapitalist lifestyle. By Desiree Kane.
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+33 +1
Pipeline demonstrators blast proposed bills as criminalizing protests
The Republican-controlled [North Dakota] state legislature is proposing bills motivated by local frustration with the protest over the pipeline near Sioux land. By Daniel A. Medina.
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+19 +1
National Guard Deploys Missile Launchers to Dakota Access Pipeline to ‘Observe’ Protestors
The Avenger missile launcher is foremost a weapon of war. What is it doing at the site of a peaceful protest? By David Axe.
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+8 +1
Our School
In the changing lands above the Arctic Circle, traditional and modern ways of knowing are integrated in the classroom. By Lauren Markham.
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+7 +1
While Americans Focus on DC, Cops Unleash Fury During DAPL Water Protector Eviction
Violence has once again erupted in Standing Rock after police received a tacit go-ahead from the tribe to forcefully clear all camps opposing the Dakota Access Pipeline. By Claire Bernish.
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+20 +1
Sovereignty Under the Stars
On the island of Hawaii, a proposed telescope has ignited a fight between the champions of modern astronomy and Hawaiians seeking to protect a sacred site. By Trevor Quirk.
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+2 +1
What Standing Rock meant for those who took part
Protesters from afar didn’t just take a stand in North Dakota — they brought the movement back home. By Tay Wiles. (Jan. 23, 2016)
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+29 +1
Inside the final days of the Standing Rock protest
“Those small victories were always difficult to claim at Standing Rock because the terms of the protests were absolute — either the pipeline was built or it wasn’t — and I imagine that as people return to their homes or ship off to the next fight, they will have to find a more personal justification for the months they spent there.” By Jay Caspian Kang. (Feb. 21, 2017)
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+23 +1
Follow the Oil Trail and You’ll Find the Girls
A filmmaker travels the U.S. and Canada to speak with Indigenous women about the constant threats to their safety and their lives. By Riayn Fergin.
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