Weekend Edition: The latest on the land back movement, healthcare in the next four years, and suppression on college campuses.

Our last issue on Going Home looks at how Native communities are reclaiming ancestral lands – and how you can help.

December 1, 2024

Weekend Edition: The latest on the land back movement, healthcare in the next four years, and suppression on college campuses.

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Happy Sunday and welcome back. Today’s newsletter is long so my intro will be short! To close our conversation on Going Home. Learn how the Land Back movement has helped Native people in the U.S. reclaim lost land, how the government stole land from Native communities, and how you can support efforts near you. Also – a collection of news for the week and recommended reading for you and your family, provided by Banned Books Book Club. We’ve got just two workshops to close out the year, and I hope to see you there!

I’ll announce December’s theme in a special newsletter dropping Tuesday. See you then.

This newsletter is made possible because of the support from our readers. Here's how you can help us stay sustainable:

In solidarity,
Nicole

Going Home: How the land back movement is reclaiming ancestral lands.

Protestors gathered to protect ancestral lands and defend the clean water. Source: WBR.

The Land Back movement reflects the global efforts of Indigenous people to reclaim ancestral territories and sovereignty over public lands. Through a combination of military force, broken treaties, and discriminatory policies, Native communities have been stripped of 99% of their historical land base in the U.S., reduced from nearly 2.3 billion acres to just 56 million acres today. Here are some ways this has been codified in state and federal policy:

  • The Indian Removal Act of 1830 led to the forced relocation of southeastern tribes like the Cherokee, Muscogee (Creek), Seminole, Chickasaw, and Choctaw Nations along the brutal Trail of Tears, where thousands died during the journey westward.

  • In the Great Plains, the U.S. government repeatedly violated treaties like the Fort Laramie Treaty of 1868, seizing the Black Hills from the Great Sioux Nation after gold was discovered.

  • The Dawes Act of 1887 dispossessed tribes by breaking up communally held reservation lands into individual allotments, many of which were then sold to non-Native settlers.

  • Military campaigns and massacres, like the Sand Creek Massacre of 1864 where U.S. troops killed hundreds of peaceful Cheyenne and Arapaho people, were used to terrorize Indigenous communities and drive them onto increasingly smaller reservations.

  • The California Gold Rush led to state-sponsored genocide of Native peoples, with the state paying bounties for Indian scalps and heads in the 1850s and forcing survivors onto small rancherias.

Unlike what some might assume, the movement doesn't seek to displace current residents from their homes. Instead, it focuses on returning decision-making power to Indigenous communities and addressing the historical injustices of colonization that led to their dispossession. Here are four examples of what land back work looks like in action:

  • In 2020, the Esselen Tribe regained 1,200 acres of their ancestral homeland in Big Sur, California, after 250 years of displacement. Through a $4.5 million grant and partnership with Western Rivers Conservancy, the land, which includes sacred sites and endangered species, is now being used for traditional ceremonies and ecological conservation.

  • The Bois Forte Band of the Minnesota Chippewa Tribe, in partnership with The Conservation Fund, the Indian Land Tenure Foundation and the Indian Land Capital Company, purchased 28,089 acres of ancestral land within the Nett Lake and Deer Creek sections of the Bois Forte Reservation.

  • The Confederated Salish and Kootenai Tribes (CSKT) regained control of the National Bison Range in Montana in 2020. This 18,800-acre wildlife refuge, which was taken from them in 1908, is being used for bison conservation efforts while expanding public education about their cultural connections to the land.

  • In Maine, the Penobscot Nation has worked with conservation groups to reclaim over 100,000 acres of their ancestral territory along the Penobscot River since 2000, helping restore both tribal sovereignty and the river's ecological health, including critical salmon habitats.

  • In South Dakota, the Rosebud Sioux Tribe reacquired 28,000 acres of land in 2020. This prairie land is now being used for buffalo conservation, food sovereignty initiatives, and teaching traditional land management practices to tribal youth.

Indigenous communities’ approach to land stewardship goes beyond simple ownership, emphasizing a deep, complex relationship with the environment. As tribes reclaim more of their ancestral lands, they're leading innovative climate adaptation efforts and restoration projects, demonstrating how traditional Indigenous knowledge can help create a more sustainable future.

  • Support the work of NDN Collective, an Indigenous-led organization dedicated to building Indigenous power through organizing, activism, philanthropy, grantmaking, capacity-building and narrative change. You can make a donation or follow the action items for their specific initiatives.

  • Learn whose ancestral land you live on and pay real estate taxes to those Indigenous nations. Many tribes and Indigenous organizations have established voluntary land tax programs where residents can contribute a portion of their income or property value to support Indigenous land reclamation efforts, like the Shuumi Land Trust in the East Bay of Northern California.

  • Support Indigenous-led land conservation efforts and organizations working to protect sacred sites and expand tribal land holdings. This could mean donating to Indigenous land trusts, advocating for the return of public lands to tribal management, or backing specific land return campaigns. 

  • Call on your local, state and federal representatives to honor treaties, expand tribal sovereignty, and return public lands to tribal nations.

The latest on the Land Back movement, in which Native American tribes reclaim land. Two reporters take a look at where it’s worked and where it hasn’t at reservations in Minnesota. NPR >

The Land Back movement is also about foodways. When Native peoples' land was stolen, they lost important hunting and fishing grounds and myriad places to gather and prepare food. Civil Eats >

Tribal lands were stolen. What happens when those ancestral territories are returned? The Land Back movement is long-overdue justice. It’s also a climate solution. Vox >

The Land Back Movement Unravels Manifest Destiny. Across Indian Country, tribal nations are buying back their land one parcel at a time. Sierra Club >

On Vancouver Island, Land Back Looks Like Going Home. Indigenous-led land back efforts are underway on Canada’s Vancouver Island while the land’s original stewards protect forests from logging. Atmos >

Land Rematriation: A Conversation with Cyndi Suarez, Donald Soctomah, Darren Ranco, Mali Obomsawin, Gabriela Alcalde, and Kate Dempsey. Kate Dempsey, state director of The Nature Conservancy in Maine, discuss the future of Tribal sovereignty, Land Back, and rematriation of the planet. NPQ >

Conflict Evolution

Tuesday, December 10 | 3pm EST

Go beyond conflict resolution and apply a culturally-responsive, inclusive framework to navigating challenging conversations, mediating tense scenarios, and fostering understanding with opposing viewpoints.

Power + Privilege

Tuesday, December 3 | 3pm EST

Learn about how power dynamics and privilege can impact the workplace and perpetuate harmful practices. Gain tangible skills and tools to become a better ally and build a more inclusive and equitable workplace.

Carmen, who is indigenous Mexican, protests against the war on Gaza in Union Square on Labor Day on September 2, 2024 in New York City. (Photo by Adam Gray/Getty Images)

The untaught history of Indigenous resistance makes it hard for us to see present-day crimes. There is a lack of respect for the Indigenous past, present, and future, though we’re more than happy to grapple with the weaponization of past colonial injustices. Prism > 

A third woman died under Texas’ abortion ban. Porsha ngumezi’s case raises questions about how laws are pressuring doctors to avoid standard care even in straightforward miscarriages. Capital B News >

Climate change is disrupting access to HIV treatment. A new analysis finds that the parts of the country where HIV prevalence is high are also some of the most at-risk areas for climate disasters. them >

Thousands of students and faculty members are still being targeted in universities’ battles over harsh protest crackdowns, free speech, academic independence, and discrimination. The Intercept >

Even as agriculture in Gaza is on the ‘verge of extinction,’ farmers vow to plant their lands. From the U.S. to Gaza, Palestinians are leading efforts to sustain culture and ancestral connection through farming. Prism >

Rampant consumerism is bad for the planet. ‘Underconsumption core’ offers an alternative. Meet the new minimalism trend of 2024 — and the TikTokers hoping it will last. Grist >

Young people are increasingly becoming entangled in the juvenile legal system. “There are better ways than incarceration to make young people in need feel safe, writes Nazish Dholakia. Vera >

America is incredibly polarized. It’s bad for our health. The health impact of “polarized politicization” and how politicians fuel the fire. Vox >

Atlanta's 'Cop City' nears completion, outrunning the courts. The project's backers say Cop City figures to be open for business by the end of the year, potentially rendering the several court cases surrounding it moot. Law360 >

Amnesty International calls on Biden to free Indigenous leader “before it’s too late.” Advocates urge Biden to free Indigenous activist Leonard Peltier, who has been imprisoned for decades and repeatedly denied parole. Democracy Now >

Here’s what we could we lose with Dr. Oz and RFK Jr. in charge of our health. The modest protections of the Affordable Care Act never went far enough, but even those could be weakened under Trump. Truthout >

Here are five beautiful children's books celebrating Native American Heritage Month. Written and illustrated by Native creators, these stories bring Indigenous experiences to young readers through tales of environmental activism, family gatherings, and cultural celebrations. Curated by our sister organization, Banned Books Book Club.

By Aslan Tudor and Kelly Tudor


By Julie Flett


Edited by Cynthia Leitich Smith

By Andrea L. Rogers, illustrated by Madelyn Goodnight

By Richard Van Camp, pictures by George Littlechild

That’s all for this week! Thanks for reading. If you learned something new and want to keep this space going,

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