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- This Prairie city is land, too –I wonder what it would mean to walk freely on my own lands without fear of surveillance by white prairie settlers and criminalization by the institutions that serve their interests.
- Sexual sovereignty –Indigenous sex workers continue to pave the way for sexual liberation. How is this fundamental to Land Back?
- Becoming intimate with the land –To make the link between hunting, land use, and Land Back, Alex Wilson spoke to three Indigenous women hunters about patriarchy, spirituality, and the joys of being on the land.
- Reconnecting to the spirit of the language –In all of our interviews with nêhiyawêwin-speaking Elders, learners, and teachers across Treaty 6, we learned that the land is integral to Indigenous language revitalization, as the land and the language are inherently and intrinsically connected.
- mâmawiwikowin –European political traditions would have us believe that being sovereign means asserting exclusive control over a territory, whereas Prairie NDN political traditions teach us that it is through our relationship with others that we are sovereign.
- Four case studies of Land Back in action –From land trusts to mushroom permitting, here are some examples of what Land Back looks like on the ground
- Land as a social relationship –The land has always been here and Indigenous Peoples have always been reclaiming parts of it. So Canada’s challenge is how to keep us off of it, and how to keep us from holding onto the idea that it’s right for us to reclaim it.
- 100 years of land struggle –A timeline of Land Back events from the past century
- What is Land Back? A Settler FAQ –Settlers have a lot of questions about Land Back: What does it mean? Who will the land be given back to? How will it be governed? Will settlers be forced to leave the continent? Brooks Arcand-Paul and Nickita Longman help clear up some of the frequently asked questions about the…
- “I have the inalienable right to protect this land” –An interview with Elder Jo-Ann Saddleback about Land Back, matriarchy, democracy, and decolonization.
- “Land Back” is more than the sum of its parts –When we say “Land Back” we want the system that is land to be alive so that it can perpetuate itself, and perpetuate us as an extension of itself. That’s what we want back: our place in keeping land alive and spiritually connected.
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