NPP Legacies of Resistance: Indigenous Environmental Advocacy (Olympia)

Quarters
Fall Open
Location
Native Pathways - Olympia
Class Standing
Freshman
Sophomore
Junior
Senior
Kyle Pittman
Hailey Maria Salazar

In the Native Pathways Program’s fall quarter “Legacies of Resistance: Indigenous Environmental Advocacy and Climate Action,” students will explore historical and contemporary ways Native North Americans cultivate and maintain relationships with their surroundings. This program begins by examining diverse pre-contact landscapes and lifeways across the continent. Then, students will study how Indigenous/Tribal communities navigated the disruptions and attempted detachments associated with Euro-American colonization. We will investigate the many methods Indigenous Peoples across North America have used including diplomacy, military force, policy works, and numerous forms of protest to protect and retain sovereignty over important lands and spaces. This history illustrates contexts of continuity and change that provides necessary to understand recent efforts in fighting for environmental justice, promoting the implementation of traditional ecological knowledge, and initiating proactive measures to combat global climate change.

This program takes a broad geographic scope spanning North America to highlight and draw connections between how Indigenous Peoples have interacted with their distinct environments prior to colonization. Students will then critically analyze and unpack narratives of Euro-American “discovery” of “empty lands” that opened new “frontiers” of settlement, which have been used to justify the dispossession of ancestral lands for agricultural production, extractive industries, and transportation infrastructure. Moving beyond these persistent tropes, we will focus on the ways Native Nations have sustained relationships and defended essential spaces despite these settler colonial structures. As Potawatomi scientist Robin Wall Kimmerer notes, Indigenous Peoples have long taken “care of the land as if our lives, both material and spiritual, depended on it.” In recent decades, protectionary measures have been tightly entwined with issues tribal sovereignty, civil rights, and environmental justice. This program explores the intersections between these movements and how they engage within broader national and international discourses. This program is writing and research intensive, considering Indigenous Methodologies and methods as the focal point of Indigenous research and analysis but including western, or mixed methods, of inquiry and data collection.

Registration

Freshman level by faculty approval/signature

Course Reference Numbers

So - Sr (12): 10294
So - Sr (1 - 16): 10295

Academic Details

12

2-16 credit variable credit option is available to students with faculty signature. 

25
Freshman
Sophomore
Junior
Senior

$35 for NPP cultural meals and materials

Schedule

Fall
2022
Open
Hybrid (F)

See definition of Hybrid, Remote, and In-Person instruction

Evening and Weekend

All Native Pathways sites meet at a site specific location two times per week (6-9:30pm every T/TH) AND meet all together at the Longhouse on the Evergreen State College campus in Olympia, WA three weekends per quarter.

Fall meeting dates are :

Saturday, October 1

Saturday, November 5

Sunday November 6

Saturday December 3

Sunday December 4

Schedule Details
Purce Hall 2 - Lecture
Native Pathways - Olympia