Events
- Come meet faculty, staff, current and new students! Enjoy food and gifts and find out more about CNAIS.
- This paper examines what we believe to be a forerunner of many current livestock programs – the provision of reindeer to Native Alaskans starting in the 1890s. Reindeer were imported from Russia with the intended purpose of providing a
- What happens to a community when it casts itself on the walls that surround it? Using the murals of Boyle Heights, Los Angeles and the recent Indigenous Mural Space executed in the Visual Arts Complex on CU Â鶹ӰԺ campus as particular examples,
- Karelian, Uilta, Mordva, Sami, Nenets, Aleut, Mari, and Evenk. These are only a few of tens of indigenous peoples living in Russia. Each maintains resilient lifeways in the face of challenges imposed by national government and global economics. Yet
- Professor Coll Thrush is a Graduate of Fairhaven College at Western Washington Univeristy and the University of Washington, Coll Thrush is professor of history at the University of British Columbia in Vancouver in unceded Coast Salish territories
- Since 2014, CU and the Pueblo of Pojoaque have been partnering to expand knowledge of ancestral archaeological sites on and adjacent to Pojoaque tribal land. In this talk, I explain why the concept of partnership better-captures the approach we are