Indigenous tribes are implementing Rights of Nature laws to establish protections for the land against fracking and other harmful extraction
After filing discrimination lawsuits and facing hostile management, Chateau Marmont workers won their right to unionize
Learning Indigenous history can shift how students think about Native peoples, but funding and standardization affect the success of these initiatives
Trader Joe’s workers have attempted different unionization strategies across stores but have been met with similar union-busting tactics
Selectively borrowing Indigenous practices cannot truly address the climate crisis or injustices to Indigenous peoples perpetrated by white settler colonialism
Different tribes have varied histories of land dispossession, leading tribes to work with individuals, organizations, and governments to return Native land
Loko i‘a, or fishponds, in Hawai‘i are a chance to wrest food security and culture back from American colonization
The military often targets lower-income BIPOC for enlistment. What will it mean for a prospective recruit to not have to choose between debt and service?
Fires fueled by climate crisis expose the intersecting injustices incarcerated people face and the comprehensive reforms needed for a Just Transition
Foster care youth become trapped by the state systems never created to truly nurture them or their families. Abolition offers a path forward
Barrio Logan residents are fighting to change San Diego zoning laws that allow industrial pollution in their neighborhoods
As climate councils invite youth input, varied program structures and different degrees of local government support affect councils’ impact
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