All Ivy Native Council CONFERENCE at Yale coming up! April 3-5
Register online before March 20th for cheaper, early fee:
http://spreadsheets.google.com/viewform?formkey=cGRLUERQUkRET0xiQnktM3dwVkdnWGc6MA..
we will be taking the metro north to new haven. Might get half of the cost reimbursed.
Monday, March 2, 2009
Monday, February 23, 2009
Eastern Pequot Archaeological Field School
Stephen Silliman, who spoke at NAHM's archaeological panel event, hosts a field school each summer. Applications are up, and will be due in March. It sounds like a really great program, if you are at all interested in archaeology and especially if you would like to experience first hand how archaeology and Native American society can work together.
The pdf copy of the application can be found here:
http://www.faculty.umb.edu/stephen_silliman/fieldschoolapplication-2009.pdf
The pdf copy of the application can be found here:
http://www.faculty.umb.edu/stephen_silliman/fieldschoolapplication-2009.pdf
Wednesday, November 19, 2008
TONIGHT:

Repatriating Native Alaskan Songs at Columbia University
Wed, Nov 19, 8:30p – 9:30p
Fayerweather 313
Currently, Columbia University owns over 120 IƱupiat songs gathered by Laura Bolton, an eminent folk music collector of the 20th century. Today, these songs are in the process of being returned to their communities of origin in Barrow, Alaska. Two Columbia Professors involved in the repatriation of the collection, Aaron Fox and Chie Sakakibara, will be sharing some of these songs, as well as presenting their knowledge on the joint project between Barrow, Alaska and Columbia and discussing the importance of considering intellectual property rights in repatriation policies. Snacks will be provided.
Monday, November 17, 2008
Email sent by Sandy Grande:
Hey Everyone, Please be sure to read this letter sent by Sandy Grande.
Tecumseh Project
“To counter the threat of white encroachment and dispossession, Tecumseh conceived of an alliance of all remaining Indigenous peoples, from Canada to the Gulf of Mexico, from the prairies of the Midwest to the swamplands of Florida. All Indian people would set aside their ancestral rivalries and unite into a single movement to defend their culture, their homelands, and their very lives.”
The Tecumseh Project is dedicated to advancing and expanding sovereignty and self-determination for Indigenous peoples both in the U.S. and internationally. To this end, it is committed to building transcultural and transnational solidarities among Indigenous and other peoples working toward decolonization and the effort to develop a world free of exploitation.
Background
As the global Indigenous solidarity movement gains momentum, there has been, consequently, considerable turn over in Indigenous leadership. At the same time, the unprecedented involvement of Presidential nominee Barak Obama with Native American constituencies has had a ripple effect throughout Indian Country. These changes have sparked revitalization among several organizations and constituencies, creating a synchronicity of initiatives. For example:
• Ford Foundation, launching of the Native American Arts and Cultures Foundation
• Columbia University and Barnard College efforts to launch a Native Studies initiative
• Formation of the new national Native American Studies Association
• D’Arcy McNickle Center’s launching of the Newberry Consortium in American Indian Studies that will include institutions nationally and internationally
• NYU Hemispheric Institute, getting ready to launch Cultural Center in Chiapas
• The passing of the United Nations Declaration of the Rights of Indigenous Peoples
Clearly, this is an opportune moment to bridge visions and consolidate resources in a broader effort to promote Indigenous sovereignty and self-determination.
There has long been a need for an organizational entity that helps to bridge the gap between scholarly research and public discourse as generated by the academic, activist, and policy-making sectors. Moreover, while there is wide interest in developing a Native Studies initiative in New York City (as demonstrated through the symposia of Native scholars held at Columbia University 2007-2008), the diversity of populations and interests renders traditional approaches incompatible. New York City, however, presents its own unique set of assets, most notably; it is the home of the largest, most diverse, and fastest growing urban Indian population in the United States as well as the home of numerous governmental and non-governmental institutions that work on behalf of Indigenous peoples including: The United Nations, the National Museum of the American Indian, the Hemispheric Institute (NYU), the American Indian Community House, and the Natural History Museum among others.
Project Description
The broad aim of the proposed Tecumseh Project would be to advance a more inclusive and robust public discourse on Native Americans in New York City as well as on the challenge of achieving intellectual and political sovereignty across Indigenous communities globally. In so doing, the Project aims to bring to the forefront Indigenous perspectives on democracy and human rights that have been marginalized or distorted within traditional venues, producing counter-narratives of sovereignty and self-determination. Efforts would be driven by a core of Indigenous and non-Indigenous scholars, activists, and community members committed to building transcultural and transnational solidarity among Indigenous peoples and others committed to reimagining a world free of myriad forms of exploitation.
Toward this end, the Project would engage a range of issues, from education and public health to the arts and environmental science.
Possible Activities
• Production of policy papers, reports, articles, original research
• Develop conferences, workshops, for the scholarly community, activists, public schools, and governmental and non-governmental entities
• Develop a mapping of Native New York collecting existing resources, histories, archives, leaders, community members, activists, scholars, and artists
• Develop partnerships with other centers and institutes at Barnard, Columbia, NYU and CUNY schools working on issues of race and social justice
• Build solidarities among key constituencies serving the Indigenous community in NYC
• Build solidarities among key constituencies serving the Indigenous community nationally and globally
• Develop an electronic clearinghouse on important source materials
• Host an annual lecture and film series
• Host fellowships for Indigenous leaders and scholars interested in working in New York City
• Provide course offerings for students interested in Native American Studies
Theoretical Framework
The framework for the Project draws from Grande’s work on Red Pedagogy (2004) and is guided by the following principles of Red Pedagogy:
• Red Pedagogy is a pedagogical project wherein pedagogy is understood as being inherently political, spiritual, and intellectual.
• Red Pedagogy is fundamentally rooted in indigenous knowledge and praxis
• Red Pedagogy is informed by critical theories. A red pedagogy searches for ways it can both deepen and be deepened by engagement with critical and revolutionary theories of education and society.
• Red pedagogy promotes an education for decolonization. The root metaphors of decolonization (equity, emancipation, sovereignty, and balance) help to define a pedagogy that makes no claim to political neutrality but rather engages a method of analysis and social inquiry that troubles the capitalist-imperialist aims of unfettered competition, accumulation, and exploitation.
• Red Pedagogy is a project that interrogates the relationship between democracy and indigenous sovereignty. In this context sovereignty is broadly defined as “a peoples right to rebuild its demand to exist and present its gifts to the world…an adamant refusal to dissociate culture, identity, and power from the land ” (Lyons, 2000).
• Red Pedagogy actively cultivates a praxis of collective agency. That is, it builds transcultural and transnational solidarities among indigenous peoples and others committed to reimagining a democratic/sovereign space free of imperialist, colonialist and capitalist exploitation.
• Red Pedagogy is grounded in hope. That is, not the future centered hope of the Western imagination, but rather a hope that lives in deep contingency with the past – one that trusts the beliefs and understandings of our ancestors, the power of traditional knowledge, and the possibilities of new understandings.
Sunday, November 16, 2008
Fun Things
Sherman Alexie on the Colbert Report for those of you who haven't seen this clip yet. "Think of it as reparation"
Saturday, November 8, 2008
EVENTS THIS WEEK:
Week of Nov. 9th
1) MONDAY:Emminent Domain and Land Rights Movie and Discussion. Oxfam's documentary "Our Land, Our Life" about the Dan Sisters. 8-930 pm. Location: Broadway room. Snacks provided. Co-sponsored by Earth Co and SEEJ.
2) TUESDAY: NE2SS event we sponsored. at the LGBT community center, 5-630 pm.
3) THURSDAY: 7-830 in the James room at Barnard. Archaeology Panel with Sev Fowles and Stephen Silliman. Food provided by Barnard Catering and co-sponsored by the barnard anthro dept. (Amy, Halley, Eric and Abel are point ppl for this one).
4 ) FRIDAY: Native Art Show 5-9pm in 2nd floor IRC. Featuring john haney's music, art by students and 5 professionals. Come around 4 to set up.
Friday Night-Sunday: All Ivy Native Summit! Carpool/ Bus leaves Friday night after the show ! Bring your registration and fee if you haven't already!
1) MONDAY:Emminent Domain and Land Rights Movie and Discussion. Oxfam's documentary "Our Land, Our Life" about the Dan Sisters. 8-930 pm. Location: Broadway room. Snacks provided. Co-sponsored by Earth Co and SEEJ.
2) TUESDAY: NE2SS event we sponsored. at the LGBT community center, 5-630 pm.
3) THURSDAY: 7-830 in the James room at Barnard. Archaeology Panel with Sev Fowles and Stephen Silliman. Food provided by Barnard Catering and co-sponsored by the barnard anthro dept. (Amy, Halley, Eric and Abel are point ppl for this one).
4 ) FRIDAY: Native Art Show 5-9pm in 2nd floor IRC. Featuring john haney's music, art by students and 5 professionals. Come around 4 to set up.
Friday Night-Sunday: All Ivy Native Summit! Carpool/ Bus leaves Friday night after the show ! Bring your registration and fee if you haven't already!
Wednesday, October 29, 2008
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