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The new Killers of the Flower Moon movie is sparking a conversation about Oklahoma’s difficult history. But those conversations in schools are complicated by Oklahoma’s law limiting lessons that make students feel uncomfortable about their race or sex.
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A 2020 Supreme Court decision returned policing and prosecutions to tribal authorities, and the Muscogee Nation's tribal police want to interact differently with the community.
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Companion bills designed to change the way law enforcement responds to murdered or missing Indigenous women was signed into law almost symbolically by…
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Native American women experience violence at much higher rates than the average American. Advocates say law enforcement is overlooking their cases.
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Navajo School Superintendent Weighs Reopening School As Employees Deal With Familial Deaths From COVShawna Becenti of the Navajo Preparatory Academy in New Mexico discusses her decision to keep school virtual for the time being.
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The impeachment trial for Matthew Komalty, chairman of the 14,000 member Kiowa Tribe was halted Thursday after the Court of Indian Offenses ordered a…
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A small chink has emerged in the united front coming from Oklahoma’s tribes and the state Attorney General’s office. Two of the so-called Five Tribes say…
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Thanksgiving marks the 50th anniversary of the Alcatraz take over, when activists claimed the former prison island, citing a treaty that said all unused federal land would return to Native Americans.
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A highway project in southern Colorado recently turned up seven previously unknown Native American archaeological sites. The road is going ahead anyway over objections from some tribal members.
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Gov. Kevin Stitt announced his intention to renegotiate Oklahoma's gaming compacts, the agreements governing Indian gaming in the state, through an op-ed…
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Sixteen-year-old high school student Emma Stevens sang a version of The Beatles' "Blackbird" in her native Mi'kmaq.
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Navajo LGBTQ youth are three times as likely to attempt suicide as their white counterparts. Some are finding unexpected allies among elders whose tradition embraces the "two spirited."
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Mvskoke Media's press freedoms were rolled back by the chief of the Muscogee (Creek) Nation in Oklahoma, in what some are calling a "chilling attack" on tribal press freedom.
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The federal government has ruled that the tribe should not have qualified for the 321 acres of reservation land that it was granted in 2015.