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It’s the first county in Wisconsin to endorse the global, Indigenous-led legal movement.
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Since 2019 Wisconsin has celebrated Indigenous Peoples Day on the second Monday of October. The Milwaukee Public Museum held an event to celebrate Indigenous cultures with educational presentations and dance demonstrations.
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WUWM has been reporting on efforts to bolster resilience and biodiversity in conjunction with NPR’s “Climate Solutions” series. We now turn to perspectives shared by members of the Red Cliff Band of Lake Superior Chippewa.
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Two-hundred-fifty people gathered along Lake Michigan at South Shore Park Beach earlier this month. It was a celebration of the lake itself and the importance of freshwater in every facet of life.
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An esteemed Native American leader, Ada Deer, the first woman to lead the Bureau of Indian Affairs, died Tuesday evening of natural causes.
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Massive storms and eradicating temperature shifts are just two of the sometimes devastating symptoms of climate issues we face. What’s also clear is that it’s going to take an all-hands-on-deck approach to mitigate climate change and adapt to sustain life.
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Through archival research and oral histories, Rebecca Webster documents corn's place in Oneida's history and future.
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The restaurant has long been a dream for chef Bryce Stevenson, who grew up on the Red Cliff Band of Lake Superior Chippewa reservation and is part of a growing movement to redefine and center Indigenous cuisine.
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A beloved literary art installation at the Wisconsin Center was planned to be decommissioned as part of the center’s expansion project. That plan was met with major pushback and criticism — that the removal was a form of censorship.
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An exhibition called "Native America: In Translation," now showing at the Milwaukee Art Museum, features the works of international Indigenous artists who explore Indigenous history, culture and representation through a contemporary lens.