Indigenous groups

This archive collects stories about Indigenous communities around the world — their land rights victories, cultural preservation efforts, environmental leadership, and legal milestones. Each story highlights progress driven by or directly affecting Indigenous peoples.

Aerial view of the forested Klamath River canyon for an article about Yurok land back in California

Yurok Tribe reclaims 17,000 acres in California’s largest-ever land back deal

Yurok land back reached a historic milestone as the Yurok Tribe reacquired 17,000 acres of ancestral territory along the Klamath River, marking the largest land return agreement in California history. Secured through a partnership with conservation land trusts, the transfer places forests, sacred sites, and traditional fishing grounds back under Yurok governance. The timing amplifies the impact: salmon are already returning following the largest dam removal project in U.S. history, and Yurok stewardship gives that restoration its best chance at lasting success. The deal’s structure — using a perpetual conservation easement — offers a replicable blueprint for tribal land return negotiations nationwide.

Morning fog over the brazilian rainforest in Brazil, for article on uncontacted Indigenous territory

Colombia creates landmark territory to protect uncontacted Indigenous groups

Colombia’s new Yuri-Passé territory protects more than one million hectares of southern Amazon rainforest — the country’s first area created specifically to shield an uncontacted Indigenous group from outside interference. Neighboring Indigenous communities, who had quietly known about the Yuri-Passé for generations, spent over a decade gathering evidence and building trust with the government to make this happen. What’s remarkable is that they led the entire process: shaping the framework, presenting the case, and bringing the state along with them. The protected zone also overlaps with Río Puré National Park, safeguarding habitat for giant anteaters, giant armadillos, and hundreds of other species. With more than 100 isolated Indigenous groups still living across the Amazon, this Indigenous-led approach offers a hopeful template for protecting both peoples and forests worldwide.

Prairie Land Potawatomi Nation's Chief Shab-eh-nay, for article on Land Back Illinois

Illinois returns stolen land to Prairie Band Potawatomi Nation

Land Back just scored a major win in Illinois: Governor JB Pritzker signed a law transferring 1,500 acres of Shabbona Lake State Recreation Area to the Prairie Band Potawatomi Nation, honoring a treaty signed in 1829. The land was taken while Chief Shab-eh-nay was visiting family in Kansas, then sold off to settlers. Returning it took years of patient relationship-building by nation chairman Joseph “Zeke” Rupnick, who met repeatedly with neighbors and lawmakers. The park stays open to its half-million annual visitors, with campsites and trails intact — what changes is who holds the title. It’s one parcel, but it’s a real, legally binding step in a movement reshaping how the U.S. reckons with Indigenous land.

A Aerial Photo Of Fredericksburg Va on a clear fall day, for article on Rappahannock Tribe rights of nature

Rappahannock Tribe first in U.S. to enshrine rights of nature into constitution

The Rappahannock Tribe of Virginia just became the first tribal nation in the U.S. to enshrine the rights of nature directly into its constitution, granting the Rappahannock River nine specific rights — including the right to flourish, regenerate, and flow with clean, unpolluted water. Both the tribe and its citizens can now go to court on the river’s behalf, treating it as a living entity rather than a resource. Chief Anne Richardson called the river “the Mother of our Nation,” and the protection arrives as suburban sprawl and fracking proposals press in on the watershed. It’s a quietly radical move that joins a growing global wave — from Ecuador to Aotearoa New Zealand — reimagining what nature is owed under the law.

Teepees under the northern lights, for article on Indigenous-led conservation

Indigenous governments in the Canada’s Northwest Territories sign $375M deal to protect their land

Indigenous-led conservation took a major leap in Canada’s Northwest Territories, where 22 Indigenous governments signed a $375 million agreement to steward their ancestral lands over the next decade. It’s one of the largest Indigenous-led conservation efforts anywhere in the world, and crucially, the nations themselves decide how the money is used — whether for land guardians, new protected areas, climate research, or language and culture programs rooted in the land. “We’re protecting the spirit of the land,” said Dehcho Grand Chief Herb Norwegian, describing the land itself as a living organ in need of care. As global conservation increasingly recognizes that Indigenous-managed territories safeguard extraordinary biodiversity, this agreement offers a powerful model for what real partnership can look like.

Brazilian Indian Kaingang, for article on Brazil Indigenous representation

Brazil elects record-high number of Indigenous mayors, vice mayors, and councilors

Indigenous representation in Brazil hit a new high in October 2024, with 256 Indigenous candidates winning seats from city council to mayor — the most ever recorded. They were the only demographic group whose vote totals grew that election, drawn from a record 169 ethnic groups fielding candidates across the country. Among the firsts: Florianópolis, a city founded 351 years ago, elected its very first Indigenous councilor, while in Marcação, all nine newly elected councilors self-identified as Indigenous. With municipal governments running the schools, clinics, and services that shape daily life, these wins put Indigenous leaders where decisions actually land — and build a pipeline toward the 2026 state and federal races, where the movement hopes to climb another rung.

Good news for Indigenous rights and climate, for article on Indigenous land titles

Record number of Indigenous land titles granted in Peru via innovative process

Indigenous land titles in the Peruvian Amazon just hit a new milestone: 37 communities secured formal recognition in under 11 months, the fastest pace in the country’s history. The breakthrough came from a partnership between AIDESEP, Peru’s Indigenous rights organization, and Rainforest Foundation U.S., who put satellite mapping tools and training directly into the hands of community forest monitors instead of routing everything through outside experts. Research suggests titled Indigenous territories see roughly two-thirds less deforestation than untitled lands nearby, making this one of the most effective climate tools we have. The model is designed to travel — a hopeful blueprint for protecting forests, honoring ancestral stewardship, and recognizing the communities who have cared for these ecosystems all along.

Inside Passage Landscape, for article on Haida land title

British Columbia agrees to hand title of a million acres of land back to the Haida Nation

Haida title recognition just became real: nearly half a million hectares of Crown land across more than 200 islands off Canada’s northwest coast are being transferred to the Haida Nation, after Haida citizens approved the “Rising Tide” agreement by a wide margin. What makes this remarkable is how it happened — not through a generations-long court battle, but through direct negotiation with British Columbia, sparing the Nation the ruinous legal fights other Indigenous peoples have endured. Premier David Eby called it “long-overdue,” and advocates are already pointing to it as a model. For Indigenous land-rights movements worldwide, it offers something hopeful: proof that governments can choose to act with integrity, rather than wait to be forced by a judge.

Tall old-growth redwood trees in northern California for an article about Yurok Tribe land return, for article on tribal co-management

Yurok Tribe becomes first Native people to co-manage land with the National Park Service

Yurok Tribe land return marks a historic milestone as the tribe reclaims 125 acres of ancestral territory and becomes the first Native nation to formally co-manage land alongside the National Park Service. The agreement returns the parcel known as ‘O Rew, near Orick in Humboldt County, after more than a century of displacement that stripped the Yurok of roughly 90% of their homeland. Ecological restoration is already underway, with thousands of juvenile salmon returning to a rebuilt Prairie Creek. The deal reflects a growing Land Back movement and sets a new precedent for Indigenous stewardship of public lands.

California coast, for article on Indigenous Marine Stewardship Area

First ever U.S. Indigenous Marine Stewardship Area declared in California

Indigenous marine stewardship just took a historic leap: three sovereign tribal nations along California’s northern coast have declared nearly 700 square miles of ocean and coastline under their own protection — the first Indigenous Marine Stewardship Area in U.S. history. The Tolowa Dee-ni’ Nation, the Resighini Tribe, and the Cher-Ae Heights Indian Community didn’t ask permission. They drew on their own authority to safeguard kelp forests, estuaries, salmon, and the surf smelt that Jaytuk Steinruck describes in songs going back forever. Their work alone covers 13% of California’s goal to protect 30% of its lands and waters by 2030. It’s a powerful reminder that the people who’ve stewarded these places for millennia are still leading the way home.