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climate change

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There are 57 posts available.

International Outcry against California’s Forest Offset Scam

Global civil society rejects REDD in climate law Indigenous Environmental Network – From Africa to the Amazon, from Chiapas... Read More

Corporate Colonialism: The Ethnic Cleansing of the Maasai People of Tanzania

In late March 2013 it was announced that ‘the government of Tanzania is establishing a corridor of 1,500 sq... Read More

Should Chiapas Farmers Suffer for California’s Carbon?

“We are not responsible for climate change—it’s the big industries that are,” said Abelardo, a young man from the... Read More

Sacred Sites and Indigenous Peoples Of The Altai Back Under Threat After New Decree

There was a jubilant response when IC reported, in July this year, that a new decree had been passed... Read More

Book Review: Asserting Native Resilience – Pacific Rim Indigenous Nations Face the Climate Crisis

Extreme weather events forced an awareness of urgent climate disruptions this year, with July 2012 being the hottest month... Read More

IKP and the Barabaig: A Heart to Heart Partnership

The goal of Indigenous Knowledge Project (IKP) is to empower indigenous communities in documenting and protecting their traditional knowledge,... Read More

Interview with Barabaig about Current Food Crisis

In this two-part video, the Indigenous Knowledge Project speak with the Barabaig about the food crisis they now face.... Read More

Survival, Sovereignty and Sustainability at ‘Ground Zero’ for Climate Change and Globalization

As a result of lack of land title, insensitive state intervention and climate change, members of the Barabaig tribe... Read More

Quileute Tribe Fights to Regain Precious Land in a Changing Climate

“The Washington state community of La Push, located just west of Olympic National Park, is home to the Quileute... Read More

Climate Vultures Circling Rio

Forecast for Rio+20: ‘Green Capitalism’ as Indigenous Peoples press for the Rights of Nature. CENSORED NEWS: Indigenous Peoples are... Read More

Beyond Their Wildest Dreams

Collective amnesia and social attention deficit often erase the memory required to understand where new phenomena like green greed... Read More

Alternatives to the green economy from Bolivian civil society

The Bolivian Climate Change Platform has released a position paper on Rio+20 in which they call on “social movements... Read More

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It is instructive to see how mental, spiritual and physical health coincide in the indigenous philosophy, while the progressive view remains trapped in a treatment rather than preventive mode. It...
Kia ora, I would like to say unless they, ( those who say no more Full- Blooded Maori), know the whakapapa of every single Maori in Aotearoa, they should just...
Mohawk??I stand and prepared to back my people at any and all cost...
I have worked with, lived with, and been around Copala Triquis for the past 12 years, and have researched extensively the political oppression in teh region - ever since the...
Thank you for your comment, trog69. You might have seen my update http://intercontinentalcry.org/wall-street-tea-party-convergence-19421/ on the story, including a link to a special report by Charles Tanner, titled Take these Tribes Down....
Good afternoon, Mr. Taber. I must admit that part of my astonishment upon reading about this is my complete ignorance that there is a concerted effort to take the rest...
Thank you, David. While it's good that some elected officials are joining environmentalists and tribes in opposing Gateway Pacific Terminal, the Tea Party, AFL-CIO and anti-Indian property rights activists have...
Seattle Mayor Mike McGinn comments on proposed coal trains and export terminals: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=kOi4iEsSl_k...

"In a media landscape made up of lies, flash, giant blind spots and corporatized sites of distraction, Intercontinental Cry is a trustworthy pathway to the truth where people who are committed to understanding Indigenous realities can gain insight and information to illuminate and activate their struggles."

Taiaiake Alfred
Professor of Indigenous Governance at UVIC and author of Wasáse
Hair of the Dog