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Native people who have relied on paper checks for their tax returns or Social Security payments are being forced to make a change.
The movement to protect sacred sites is once again drawing attention as the Trump administration pushes to open more federal lands to development.
Complete NAFOA’s Tribal survey by June 25 to help inform advocacy efforts. Submit comments by June 30, 2025, using NAFOA’s template to highlight Tribal concerns. Outline and plan a grant portfolio and ...
President Donald Trump is expected to rescind the designation of two national monuments supported by tribes in California.
In what is becoming an annual occurrence, numerous fires across at least three Canadian provinces are putting Indigenous ...
An exhibit at the Museum of Natural and Cultural History in Eugene, Oregon, assembles works by Native LGBTQ2 artists that ...
It’s the end of an era for a mainstay of Native arts and culture in the nation’s capital. After nearly nine decades, the ...
"We will be retaining advanced appropriations": Rep. Tom Cole (R-Oklahoma), Chair of House Committee on Appropriations, vows to protect advance funding for Indian Health Service after Trump ...
A new lawsuit alleges the U.S. owes $23.3 billion for the mismanagement of tribal trust funds during the Indian boarding school era.
Indigenous people from other countries, some who have visas or are awaiting decisions from immigration proceedings, are among ...
Native Americans turned to civil disobedience during high profile protests at Standing Rock and following George Floyd’s death more recently, and during the formation of the American Indian Movement ...
Native people experiencing homelessness are impacted by ongoing efforts to shut down encampments in urban areas.
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