Winona LaDuke , Anishinaabekwe (Ojibwe), discusses the durability of food and building a green economy in a video recording of her speech at Missouri State University.
Being committed to working hand-in-hand with tribes across the country was the message Health & Human Services Secretary Kathleen Sebelius shared on March 1 during the National...
“We are a severely oil-addicted country,” the author, activist and economist Winona LaDuke told the Tamastslikt Cultural Institute in Pendleton, Oregon on February 28, reported the...
CNN’s story about the “sweat lodge” trial of James Arthur Ray, under whose stewardship three people died in 2009 in a so-called vision quest, is drawing worldwide attention...
Opening arguments are expected to commence today, March 1, for the trial of James Arthur Ray, the controversial spiritual leader who faces charges of manslaughter after three sweat...
The Eastern Band of Cherokee Indians thinks more Cherokee medical experts will help address Indian health issues in culturally sensitive ways, reported Wake Forest University's New...
Sacramento, CA—Safe drinking water is becoming more and more of an issue in California, with up to 8.5 million residents forced to rely on water supplies that have been deemed unsa...
The old saying “breast is best” is taking on a new significance for some American Indian mothers, who see that breast-feeding is not only a responsible course for raising healthy b...