With climate change threatening Indigenous lifeways in Alaska, these four young women are devoting their careers to their preservation.
X'unei Lance Twitchell stood at a podium in Los Angeles in mid-March doing something he'd never imagined would be possible. Speaking his native Tlingit language, Twitchell accepted an Emmy Award for ...
Speaking his native Tlingit language, Twitchell accepted an Emmy Award for an episode he wrote for the PBS Kids program ...
Their complaint calls for the United Nations to investigate how military waste on Sivuqaq continues to violate the rights of ...
Imagine growing up in the Alaskan wilderness as a member of the Tlingit tribe. Today on, Dr. Paul Trebian, President & CEO of ...
New York's American Museum of Natural History (AMNH) has returned a shrine known as the Whalers' Washing House to Mowachaht, ...
People have lived in the area around modern-day Glacier Bay National Park, along Alaska’s rugged southern coastline, for at ...
The bill would require designated seats on the seven-member board to represent commercial, sport and subsistence sectors, ...
Cape Fox Tours has earned an Adventure Green Alaska certification for demonstrating compliance with its sustainable tourism practices. Adventure Green Alaska is the only sustainable tourism ...
Lakota Connor Ryan and Tlingit Ellen Bradley athletes will inspire students at Wyoming Indian, Fort Washakie, and Arapahoe/St ...
The head of Wakeland Housing and Development Corp. discusses the skills that have helped her most and what’s coming up for ...
To honor their journeys, we spoke with several Indigenous medical students who recently matched into physician-residency programs to learn more about what this moment means for them, their families, ...