Resource Library
This library contains a variety of resources to help deepen your understanding of course content. We hope you will find them interesting, but please bear in mind that these are not required reading or viewing to participate in the workshops.
All My Relations (podcast)
All My Relations is a podcast hosted by Matika Wilbur (Swinomish and Tulalip) and Adrienne Keene (Cherokee Nation) to explore our relationships— relationships to land, to our creatural relatives, and to one another. Each episode invites guests to delve into a different topic facing Native American peoples today.
GOMaluku (podcast)
Ghazali Ohorella is a former co-chair of the International Indigenous Peoples' Forum on Climate Change. This podcast draws on his extensive experience at UNFCCC negotiations and in advocating for the rights of Indigenous Peoples worldwide. It features his own musings, as well as interviews with Indigenous Peoples’ representatives and allies where they discuss the lessons they’ve learned, their thoughts, their failures, and the sacrifices they’ve made to fight for Indigenous rights.
DEcolonize and chill (podcast)
In this podcast, Ian, Ivy and Zamzam explore their experiences as African millennials trying to figure out life, race, identity, family, mental health and the relationships that make them who they are.
The red nation podcast (podcast)
Hosted by Nick Estes and Jen Marley, The Red Nation Podcast features discussions on Indigenous history, politics, and culture from a left perspective. The Red Nation is dedicated to the liberation of Indigenous peoples from colonialism through centring Indigenous agendas and struggles in direct action, advocacy, mobilisation, and education.
Medicine for the resistance (podcast)
Medicine for the Resistance is a podcast hosted by an Anishnaabe kwe and an Afro mystic looking at life through Black and Indigenous eyes. Topics range from Indigenous literature, to the racist history of agriculture.
No white saviors (Instagram, Podcast and website)
No White Saviors is a an advocacy campaign based out of Kampala, Uganda. Its organisers employ their collective experience in the development & aid sectors in advocating to dismantle problematics systems of ‘development’ in African communities and to rebuild a network of liberation based on African communal power.
Indigenous storywork (website)
The Indigenous Storywork website aims to help educators learn about Indigenous cultures and ways of knowing, predominantly through Indigenous traditional and life-experience stories. By implication, the term storywork signals that Indigenous stories are to be taken seriously, and that we as storytellers and storylisteners/readers/learners can work together to learn from and with these stories
International Indigenous Peoples’ Forum on Climate Change (website)
This is the official website of the International Indigenous Peoples’ Forum on Climate Change. The forum’s purpose is to strengthen the knowledge, technologies, and practices of Indigenous Peoples in responding to climate change, to facilitate the sharing of best practices for mitigation and adaptation, and to enhance the engagement of local communities and Indigenous Peoples in UNFCCC processes.
Disappointment as COP25 Fails to Deliver on Indigenous Rights (article)
Written by Laura Simpson Reeves, this article recounts COP25 from an Indigenous perspective and outlines how the conference’s processes and outcomes failed to deliver on Indigenous Rights.
Living in Two Worlds in Sápmi (article)
In this article, Sheldon Ferris interviews Jannie Staffansson, a renowned Indigenous Saami climate change expert from Northern Sweden. Jannie discusses working at the interface between Indigenous and Western science and knowledge systems, and her experiences of advocating for action on climate change at international negotiations.
We are the victims but we are also the solution (article)
This article profiles Indigenous climate activist Hindou Oumarou Ibrahim, who has been named as one of TIME Magazine’s 15 Women Leading the Fight Against Climate Change. Hindou previously served as Co-Chair for the International Indigenous Peoples’ Forum on Climate Change, and speaks in this article about the life experiences that culminated in her fighting for the rights of Indigenous Peoples at an international level.
Climate change takes water and milk from Mbororo people (interview)
Hindou Oumarou Ibrahim shares how Indigenous women in Chad are the most affected by climate change as the ones collecting food, water, and traditional medicines for their communities.
United Nations Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples (human rights document)
The United Nations Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples is a comprehensive international human rights document on the rights of Indigenous Peoples. It sets out the minimum standards for the survival, dignity, wellbeing, and rights of the world’s Indigenous Peoples.