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High Country News

High Country News

A nonprofit independent magazine of unblinking journalism that shines a light on all of the complexities of the West.

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Indigenous Affairs

Posted inArticles

Washington solar project paused amid concern about Indigenous sites

by B. ‘Toastie’ Oaster August 12, 2024August 9, 2024

Avangrid Renewables said they plan to review comments from tribal nations and private landowners.

Sleeping Buffalo and Medicine Rocks, Saco vicinity, Phillips County, Montana. October 1994
Posted inAugust 2024: In the Wake of the Floods

The vision of Little Shell

by Chris La Tray August 1, 2024July 31, 2024

How Ayabe-way-we-tung guided his tribe in the midst of colonization.

Boats carry Hanford Journey attendees down the Columbia River in Washington toward Hanford reactors, one that’s cocooned and another that’s decommissioned but still standing.
Posted inAugust 2024: In the Wake of the Floods

Indigenous celebration of Hanford remembers the site before nuclear contamination

by B. ‘Toastie’ Oaster August 1, 2024August 1, 2024

At the fourth annual Hanford Journey, Yakama Nation youth, elders and scientists share stories about a land that is a part of them.

Danica Nava with her new book, "The Truth According to Ember."
Posted inAugust 2024: In the Wake of the Floods

Indigenous people deserve gushy romance novels

by Taylar Dawn Stagner July 31, 2024July 31, 2024

‘The Truth According to Ember’ is a summer rom-com about Native people learning to be their authentic selves.

Posted inArticles

What a Kamala Harris presidency could mean for the West

by Anna V. Smith and Erin X. Wong July 22, 2024August 8, 2024

Harris has prioritized protecting public lands and pursued accountability for polluters, but her track record on tribal affairs is mixed.

Solar panels sit on top of buildings and homes in Lapwai, Idaho.
Posted inJuly 2024

How the Nez Perce are using an energy transition to save salmon

by Emily Senkosky July 1, 2024June 28, 2024

The tribe is working to replace the generating capacity of the Lower Snake River dams with solar power.

Posted inArticles

What does the BLM Public Land Rule mean for tribal stewardship of public lands?

by Anna V. Smith June 26, 2024August 8, 2024

The rule offers further pathways for tribes to proactively protect certain public lands.

Posted inJuly 2024

In green energy boom, one federal agency made the Yakama Nation an offer they had to refuse

by B. ‘Toastie’ Oaster June 24, 2024June 24, 2024

Federal rules and a lack of protection for sacred places left the Indigenous nation with an impossible choice.

Posted inArticles

A wildflower is teaching the non-Native public about food sovereignty

by B. ‘Toastie’ Oaster May 24, 2024August 8, 2024

Oregon’s third Camas Festival highlights the joys and responsibilities of tending the iconic northwestern plant.

A view over Iron Gate Dam outside of Hornbrook, California, in February. The reservoir’s water level has continued to fall since drawdown began in January.
Posted inMay 2024: A River Returns

Undamming the Klamath

by Nika Bartoo-Smith May 2, 2024May 2, 2024

Tribal nations are restoring the river while reclaiming and revitalizing their cultural heritage.

Posted inMay 2024: A River Returns

Art without the mask of Native identity

by B. ‘Toastie’ Oaster May 1, 2024April 30, 2024

Multidisciplinary artist Nizhonniya Austin talks about authenticity, trust fund pottery hipsters, and her role as Cara in ‘The Curse.’

Comb Ridge in the Shash Jáa unit of Bears Ears National Monument, Utah.
Posted inArticles

As national monuments multiply, Bears Ears forges forward

by Anna V. Smith April 30, 2024August 8, 2024

Tribal co-management takes shape on the ground.

Posted inArticles

Wildlife habitat and tribal cultures threatened by Washington’s largest wind farm

by B. ‘Toastie’ Oaster April 26, 2024August 8, 2024

The newly approved renewable energy project is planned across an eco-corridor and ceremonial sites.

Posted inArticles

Tribes turn to the U.N. for help intervening in gigantic Arizona wind project

by Taylar Dawn Stagner April 23, 2024August 8, 2024

The SunZia transmission line will cut through Indigenous lands in the Southwest.

Posted inArticles

Indigenous people rush to stop ‘false climate solutions’ ahead of COP29

by Maria Parazo Rose April 22, 2024August 8, 2024

The next international climate meeting could make carbon markets permanent. Indigenous leaders call for a moratorium before it’s too late.

Posted inArticles

At UN, Interior says it’s starting to include consent in tribal policy

by Anna V. Smith April 18, 2024August 8, 2024

The Indigenous-led department is a ’shining star’ when it comes to tribal consultation, but it still has a long ways to go.

Posted inArticles

Your guide to the 2024 UN Permanent Forum on Indigenous Issues

by Anita Hofshneider April 15, 2024August 8, 2024

This year’s gathering of global Indigenous leaders, activists and policymakers puts a spotlight on youth.

Sonya Schaller, a supporter from Omak, Washington, holds a sign during a gathering on Badger Mountain in East Wenatchee, Washington.
Posted inArticles

Wenatchi-P’squosa people demonstrate against proposed solar project 

by B. ‘Toastie’ Oaster April 5, 2024August 8, 2024

The Badger Mountain development in eastern Washington threatens heritage foodways on sacred lands.

A garden with native plants in Tucson, Arizona.
Posted inApril 2024: Epic Journeys

The complex case of growing native plants

by Megan Ulu-Lani Boyanton April 1, 2024April 1, 2024

As the use of native plants becomes more widespread, Indigenous communities could lose out.

Posted inApril 2024: Epic Journeys

How states make money off tribal lands

by Anna V. Smith and Maria Parazo Rose February 28, 2024March 22, 2024

Ten states own 1.6 million acres of land within 83 tribal nations’ reservations. How did they get there?

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