Nunavut leaders say it was an exciting day to see a hydro project in Iqaluit on the federal government's fast-track list. On ...
An immersion program that helps preserve an Alaska Native language has been a boon to children displaced by last month’s ...
With all eyes on the COP30 climate talks in Belém, underway in Brazil this week, the organization representing Inuit ...
A new hydroelectric project that promises to transform energy in Nunavut’s capital has been fast-tracked by the federal ...
The Yup’ik immersion program is helping undo some of the damage Western culture did to Alaska Native language and traditions, he said. It’s also bridging the gap of two lost generations: In some cases ...
The federal government has promised to create a $50-million fund to build Inuit Nunangat University and the minister of ...
Fifty years after its signing, Cree and Inuit communities wonder whether the James Bay and Northern Quebec Agreement has ...
By Becky Bohrer, Gene Johnson, Mark Thiessen More than 1,600 were displaced, many of them now adapting to different way of life in Anchorage Darrel John watched the final evacuees depart his village ...
“This international Inuit Day, Amautiit recognizes the strength of Inuit community. The resilience and perseverance from our ...
From Canada’s National Inquiry into Missing and Murdered Indigenous Women and Girls, to this year’s Danish and Greenlandic government apologies for a forced IUD program, the spotlight is increasingly ...
It was an Inuit whale hunter who first spotted them: three juvenile California gray whales, trapped in frozen seas near Point Barrow, Alaska, on October 7, 1988. Roy Ahmaogak mentioned seeing the gray ...
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