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The Third Annual New Orleans Center for the Gulf South Indigenous Symposium will take place on Friday, March 12, from 9 a.m. to 5:30 p.m. via Zoom. This year’s theme is Being Native Today Indigenous Identities in the Gulf South.
The Third Annual New Orleans Center for the Gulf South Indigenous Symposium will take place after a yearlong postponement this Friday, March 12, from 9 a.m. to 5:30 p.m. via Zoom. This year’s theme, Being Native Today Indigenous Identities in the Gulf South, addresses how native identity has changed over time. Past years have focused on (de)colonialism and native and French encounters, over 300 years, and land sovereignty. To register, click here. ....
223 pages Christina Leza’s Divided Peoples offers a compelling examination of the fraught U.S.-Mexico borderlands. Given recent times and contentious debates about immigration, her thorough examination is much needed and timely, especially from Indigenous perspectives. As Leza’s subtitle asserts, her discussion relates to policy, activism, and Indigenous identities by focusing primarily on “The Binational Yoeme (Yaqui) Nation” and the Tohono O’odham Nation. However, Leza does this within the broader context of international relations and Indigenous peoples all along the U.S.- Mexico borderlands. Indeed, this contextualizing is illuminating and greatly enriches her engaging analysis. Strong scholarship always contextualizes, and she does this admirably. ....
Local Journalism Initiative Reporter “What happens when someone overtly steals something from you, like your lands, your culture or the identity that’s yours?” asked Tamara Bell on Monday. Tamara Bell is from the Raven Clan, Haida Nation The Haida filmmaker launched a campaign on Jan. 18 for Canada to create legislation to stop a longstanding trend: People fraudulently claiming Indigenous identity to gain funding or opportunities. The proposal comes one month after acclaimed filmmaker Michelle Latimer resigned from the CBC television series Trickster in December. She has been accused of not being Algonquin or Metis as she has claimed for decades. ....
David P. Ball, Local Journalism Initiative Haida filmmaker Tamara Bell announces her campaign for a proposed Indigenous Identities Act outside Vancouverâs Native Education College on Monday, Jan. 18, 2021. Image Credit: David P. Ball, Local Journalism Initiative January 20, 2021 - 8:00 PM Haida filmmaker Tamara Bell launched a campaign this week to convince the federal government to create legislation to stop a longstanding trend: People fraudulently claiming Indigenous identity to gain funding or opportunities. “What happens when someone overtly steals something from you, like your lands, your culture or the identity that’s yours?” Bell said, Jan. 18, as she announced the campaign for an Indigenous Identities Act outside Vancouver s Native Education College. ....