The School of Global Integrative Studies is offering a new course in Spring 2022 on cultural survival of indigenous peoples. We look forward to bringing in guest speakers with knowledge and experience across a variety of topics, including contemporary environmental issues, land acknowledgement, language survival and revival, reclaiming foodways, and voting and representation in government. Throughout the semester, we will discuss numerous examples of historical and contemporary challenges that threaten the cultural survival of indigenous peoples, and how this survival is hard-earned through adaptation and resistance, often with a backdrop of discrimination and marginalization.
Ethnic Studies & Latin American Studies Mon. Nov. 08, 2021
- Gain Experience
- CAS Inquire: #MeToo in the Renaissance
- GEOG 435: Cultural Survival: Indigenous People's Rights
- Reminder- Advising Hours
- National First Gen Celebration Week
- Professor Otaku VS. Attack on Titan
- Health and Wellness Meet-Up
- Advising Tip of the Week-Withdraw Deadline
- More than Our Work: Oral Histories of Nebraska’s Meatpacking Workers
- In Search of Messiah: Shinkai Makoto's Tenki no ko
- Native American Heritage Month Keynote Speaker with Dr. Susana Geliga
- Phi Beta Kappa Society Scholarship Application Available
- Global Café: Materiality, Social Memory and Identity Politics: Reflections on Maya Identity and Culture Heritage at Copán, Honduras