Land acknowledgments have become increasingly common nationwide over the past few years. Many mainstream public events — from soccer games and performing arts productions to city council meetings and ...
We welcome all members and guests of the University at Buffalo community, in order to study, teach, work and learn; we welcome the respectful exchange of ideas, including those which diverge from our ...
It's becoming more of a common concept to see land acknowledgment statements adopted at universities, schools, and public buildings, but one East Bay city is taking it a step further. Lafayette ...
What is a land acknowledgement statement? A land acknowledgement is a formal statement, usually presented at the beginning of public events and gatherings to recognize and honor the land upon which ...
The Millbrae City Council has implemented an official land acknowledgment to be read before every formal meeting, honoring and acknowledging the Ramaytush Ohlone people — the indigenous people of the ...
This fall, the Tufts University Art Galleries (TUAG) is showing “Ecologies of Acknowledgment,” a collaborative project between writer and interdisciplinary artist Sarah Kanouse and researcher and ...
At the outset of Microsoft’s Inspire partner conference this week, co-hosts Aliesha Pulliam, a communications manager, and broadcast journalist Elise Hu, offered two public disclosures that are ...
MINNEAPOLIS --Hennepin County is marking the start of Native American Heritage Month with a historic statement: a land and water acknowledgement. During a county commissioner meeting on Tuesday, Board ...
We acknowledge, with respect, the land our campus is on today was, and continues to be, the homelands of the Indigenous people of this area, the Nissim-Pawenan, Nisenan, and Miwok.The larger ...
The land acknowledgement should always be used widely in university activities, events and publications as it is an essential part of our commitment to truth and reconciliation. Dalhousie also has a ...
A homeowner in British Columbia, Canada, who found what might be Indigenous human remains on their land, now faces huge legal, archaeological, and monitoring costs—well over $100,000 ($73,000 U.S.) ...