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CARLISLE, Penn.—Tara Houska, Anishinaabe lawyer, advocate, and activist from the Couchiching First Nation, has been selected to receive Dickenson College’s Sam Rose ’58 and Julie Walters Prize for Global Environmental Activism.
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GARDINER, Mont. — Bison conservation organizations are calling the most recent season the deadliest wild buffalo have seen since the 2007-2008 season. 
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This story is published as part of the Global Indigenous Affairs Desk, an Indigenous-led collaboration between Grist, High Country News, ICT, Mongabay, and Native News Online.

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A county judge in central Minnesota dismissed two counts of trespassing against activist Winona LaDuke this week. 

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CHICAGO - There is a Native legend that says the world is actually on the back of a giant turtle.

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San Carlos Apache Tribe Chairman Terry Rambler appeared before the United Nations Permanent Forum on Indigenous Issues in New York City on Tuesday, urging the U.N. to support efforts to protect Indigenous sacred sites from impending destruction.
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LAS VEGAS — Today, southwest area Tribes were joined by Secretary of the Interior Deb Haaland in a celebratory ceremony dedicating a sacred Native American site in Nevada as a National Monument.
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Two Alaska Native organizations are suing the federal government to protect subsistence fishing rights on two of the state’s largest river systems amidst a worsening salmon crisis. 

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The Sault Ste. Marie Tribe of Chippewa Indians last week signed a Tribal Forest Protection Act proposal with the Hiawatha National Forest.

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For decades, Sam Kunaknana has caught grayling and hunted caribou along Fish Creek, a small river that meanders over the open Alaskan tundra near the Iñupiaq community of Nuiqsut. Kunaknana sets nets for broad whitefish, jigs for grayling, and waits for the caribou, which he remembers ambling in large herds across the muskeg years ago.