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         Native American Issues:     more books (100)
  1. Songs of the Earth: A Timeless Collection of Native American Wisdom
  2. Two-Spirit People: Native American Gender Identity, Sexuality, and Spirituality
  3. Killing the White Man's Indian: Reinventing Native Americans at the End of the Twentieth Century by Fergus M. Bordewich, 1997-04-14
  4. Genocide of the Mind: New Native American Writing (Nation Books)
  5. Giving Thanks: A Native American Good Morning Message (Reading Rainbow Book) by Jake Swamp, 1997-07
  6. Native Americans and the Environment: Perspectives on the Ecological Indian
  7. First Person, First Peoples: Native American College Graduates Tell Their Life Stories
  8. Native Americans and the Criminal Justice System
  9. Men as Women, Women as Men: Changing Genderin Native American Cultures by Sabine Lang, 1998
  10. American Indian Nations: Yesterday, Today and Tomorrow (Contemporary Native American Communities) by George Horse, 2007-07-28
  11. American Indian and Alaska Native Newspapers and Periodicals, 1971-1985 (Historical Guides to the World's Periodicals and Newspapers) by Littlefield, James W. Parins, 1986-08-18
  12. The Cultural Transformation of A Native American Family and Its Tribe 1763-1995: A Basket of Apples (Sociocultural, Political, and Historical Studies in Education) by Joel Spring, 1996-06-01
  13. Recent Legal Issues for American Indians, 1968 to the Present (Native Americans and the Law: Contemporary and Historical Perspectives on American Indian Rights, Freedoms, and Sovereignty) by John R. Wunder, 1996-10
  14. Native American Art in the Twentieth Century: Makers, Meanings, Histories by W. Rushing, 1999-03-19

121. :: John Kerry For President - Native Americans For Kerry ::
native Americans for Kerry. Click to See More Pictures John Kerry discusses issues important to native Americans on the Real Deal Express.
http://www.johnkerry.com/communities/nativeamericans/
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Native Americans for Kerry
- John Kerry National Congress of American Indians
Presidential Candidate Questionnaire

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Forward to a Friend Ensuring Tribal Sovereignty and Working to Improve the Lives of Native Americans
  • Promoting Sovereignty Improving Access the Health Care Building Infrastructure Stimulating Economic Development Creating Educational Opportunities Reducing Crime and Promoting Tribal Justice Homeland Security Protecting the Environment and Energy Development
Read how John Kerry will better the lives of Native Americans
Join Native Americans for Kerry
Support the man who supports Native Americans Join
Put your money where your mouse is....

122. Native American Drums, Jewelry, Beadwork, Pottery, Gifts, Greeting Cards, Art, C
native american Drums. Made with Spirit Made to be Played. Well intention. native american Jewelry. Wampum Beadwork by Andrew Hunter.
http://www.greattradingpath.com/
Home Southeastern
Indian History
Beadwork
Huichol beadwork

Hilde Barnes
...
Andrew Hunter

Drums
Cedar Mountain

Greeting Cards
Alyssa Hinton

Handmade Soap
Jewelry Andrew Hunter Pottery Peter B Jones The Artists Contact Us
Native American Drums
Made with Spirit Made to be Played.
Well respected for the quality of these Native American drums, created with full ceremony. Fine cedar rims with a variety of hides available to serve your intention.
Native American Jewelry
Wampum Beadwork by Andrew Hunter
Wampum was extre-mely important to woodlands culture. By adapting the tech-niques of turquoise jewelry to wampum, Andrew Hunter has revitalized a precious element of of eastern Woodland culture.
Native American Pottery
Iroquois Pottery of Peter B. Jones

123. Native Americans And The Environment
Links, articles, and bibliographies on environmental issues facing native Americans in the US and Canada.
http://www.cnie.org/NAE/
Welcome to our web site! You will find thousands of Internet and published resources described and cataloged at this site. We also have a document archive and a case studies section where we address specific issues. Please e-mail us about new web sites and books. This non-profit project has three goals:
  • to educate the public on environmental problems in Native American communities; to explore the values and historical experiences that Native Americans bring to bear on environmental issues; to promote conservation measures that respect Native American land and resource rights.
  • Our Site:
    Introduction to the issues

    Internet Resources

    Case Studies

    About this Web Site
    Search links and bibliography:
    Quick subject guide:

    Agriculture, Horticulture, Ranching
    Commercial links Cultural and Historical Issues Development and Energy ... National Council for Science and the Environment and Alx Dark
    NAE is part of the National Library for the Environment
    NAE@NCSEonline.org

    Last updated: 10 September 2002
    Links Go Native Americans Other awards: Five star review from the Society of Environmental Journalists Cited in: The Research Paper and the World Wide Web by Dawn Rodrigues (Prentice Hall, 1999);

    124. Rigoberta Menchu, MayaPages For Native Americans
    If our people are the issue, tranquility and peace in her own country on the american continent and from CharKoosta News Service, from native People magazine
    http://www.kstrom.net/isk/maya/menchu.html
    Five Hundred Years
    of Sacrifice
    Before Alien Gods
    Jump to Page Navigation Buttons
    1992 Interview with Rigoberta Menchu Tum, Mayan refugee from Guatemala, shortly before she received the Nobel Peace Prize; by Commission for Human Rights in Central America. Recent newsbytes and links to Relevant websites, and speaker's bureau, and where you can get her autobiography are at the end of the interview.
    "F or me, to celebrate the twelfth of October [Columbus Day] is the absolute expression of triumphism, occupation and presumptuousness, and I think that history will remember those that celebrate it. "T he struggle of the indigenous did not begin in 1992, and it will not end in 1992; it is simply an occasion to take advantage of the international attention. "W e are not myths of the past, ruins in the jungle, or zoos. We are people and we want to be respected, not to be victims of intolerance and racism. "I t is said that our indigenous ancestors, Mayas and Aztecs, made human sacrifices to their gods. It occurs to me to ask: How many humans have been sacrificed to the gods of Capital in the last five hundred years?" T he Guatemalan indigenous woman, Rigoberta Menchu, lowers her eyes and continues, pausing often, in the same ironic tone:

    125. The Atlantic | March 2002 | 1491 | Mann
    Because a third of the United States is owned by the federal government, the issue inevitably has native Americans managed the continent as they saw fit.
    http://www.theatlantic.com/issues/2002/03/mann.htm
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    (Contributors) More on politics and society from The Atlantic Monthly. More on the environment from The Atlantic Monthly. From the archives: "The Diffusionists Have Landed" (January 2000) You've probably heard of those crackpot theories about ancient Phoenicians or Chinese in the New World. Maybe it's time to start paying attention. By Marc K. Stengel "Can Coffee Drinkers Save the Rain Forest?" (August 1999) "Eden: A Gated Community" (June 1999) After making a fortune as founder of North Face and Esprit, Douglas Tompkins embraced the principles of deep ecology. He bought a Yosemite-sized piece of wilderness in Chile, where only he and a like-minded few would live. Tompkins ran into one big problem: other people. By William Langewiesche "An Exposion of Green" (April 1995) by Charles C. Mann he plane took off in weather that was surprisingly cool for north-central Bolivia and flew east, toward the Brazilian border. In a few minutes the roads and houses disappeared, and the only evidence of human settlement was the cattle scattered over the savannah like jimmies on ice cream. Then they, too, disappeared. By that time the archaeologists had their cameras out and were clicking away in delight. Below us was the Beni, a Bolivian province about the size of Illinois and Indiana put together, and nearly as flat. For almost half the year rain and snowmelt from the mountains to the south and west cover the land with an irregular, slowly moving skin of water that eventually ends up in the province's northern rivers, which are sub-subtributaries of the Amazon. The rest of the year the water dries up and the bright-green vastness turns into something that resembles a desert. This peculiar, remote, watery plain was what had drawn the researchers' attention, and not just because it was one of the few places on earth inhabited by people who might never have seen Westerners with cameras.

    126. TURTLE TRACKS ~ NATIVE AMERICAN NEWSLETTER FOR YOUTH
    Each issue contains native american History, Science Facts, native People Empowered, Simple Science Projects, Homeschooling Center, World News, native Crafts
    http://www.turtle-tracks.org/
    Our newsletter offers a wide assortment of activities for children of all ages. Each issue contains Native American History, Science Facts, Native People Empowered, Simple Science Projects, Homeschooling Center, World News, Native Crafts, Music and Antiquities, Games, Stories and numerous other activities. In the future we hope to add more areas of interest.
    Our website contains the archives that house every issue we have ever published so that you can go back anytime you want to reread and enjoy our back issues.
    Our library is broken down into several different catagories. Each area is filled with information and links to other sites and is updated on a regular basis.
    We have a message board so that you can talk with each other and let us know what you would like to see in upcoming issues.
    We have a Homework Help section that contains a vast array of information for every subject. This area contains a calculator, dictionaries, maps, language translations, kids' almanac, and numerous links to more help. We also provide a homeschool section that is full of ideas to help you teach your child.
    Our staff spends countless hours researching each of these areas. We do our best to provide you and your child with safe areas of interest and each link is throroughly researched and investigated so that you do not have to worry about it's content. We are constantly updating the information so come back often.

    127. Native Web
    native Web. has moved! The new URL is www.nativeweb.org.
    http://www.maxwell.syr.edu/nativeweb/
    Native Web
    has moved! The new URL is www.nativeweb.org

    128. United Native America
    grass roots movement to bring about a federal national holiday for native Americans. The Cherokee Nation of Oklahoma fully supports this issue with resolution
    http://www.unitednativeamerica.com/main.html
    Home Page U.N.A. Links
    Print the Holiday Petition
    National Holiday Information ...
    E-Mail This Site To Friends

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    MISSION STATEMENT United Native America was formed in 1993 as a nation wide grass roots movement to bring about a federal national holiday for Native Americans. The Cherokee Nation of Oklahoma fully supports this issue with resolution 91-93. United Native America resolution 1-1 calls on the federal government to stop using our tax dollars to pay for Columbus Day. Columbus does not rate a federal tax paid holiday in this country. We are standing up against the racial exclusion of Native Americans in our society to include these industries, national television stations, movie industries, national sports industries, national news media and music industries. Bringing about these changes have to take place before America can say it represents all its people equally. The American Indians helped give birth to this country and helped form the government we have today, this is the true beginning history of America. This contribution and many more are noted in the American Indian heritage month of November resolution passed each year by the United States Senate and signed by the president, please join us in the struggle in the spirit of Crazy Horse, Tecumseh and countless others to live in peace on our land.

    129. Women Issues
    Return to AICRC s Page Home Page Women s issues from The Wind River Rendezvous . Introduction The Women s Role. Woman s Work Is Never Done. Social Gathering.
    http://www.bluecloud.org/women.html
    Return to:
    AICRC's Page

    Home Page
    Women's Issues
    from "The Wind River Rendezvous" Introduction The Women's Role Woman's Work Is Never Done Social Gathering ... A Full Circle

    130. Just For You: American Indians And Alaska Natives - Healthfinder®
    health library. just for you. health care. organizations. search help about healthfinder®. home just for you american Indians and Alaska Natives.
    http://www.healthfinder.gov/justforyou/justforyou.asp?KeyWordID=220&branch=1

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