“The building is named ʔálʔal, which means ‘home’ in Lushootseed, a Native American language of the Coast Salish people in...
“We’re beginning to understand a great irony of climate change: that the people most affected by it often did the least...
“A self-declared ‘unashamedly Indigenous-centric book,’ Our Voices offers a model for Indigenous scholarship by carefully curating texts by a range...
California’s Climate Change Assessments provide the scientific foundation for understanding climate-related vulnerability at the local scale and informing resilience actions. The...
Juan Carlos Rodríguez Rivera, assistant professor at California College of the Arts, writes, “The concept of a decolonized designer is...
“Let us start by rejecting the false opposition of settler and native, migrant and inhabitant, bad species and good. Landscape...
As Thadeus Greenson reports in the North Coast Journal of Politics, People & Art, 21 October 2019, “Duluwat Island is being...
Each season, arcCA DIGEST asks experts in the season’s theme – this time around, Indigeneity – to identify emerging issues, problems,...
In June 2018, architectural intern Tiffany Shaw-Collinge interviewed three of the five women who make up just over a quarter...
On January 6, Karen and I at last got to see the Buffalo Dance in the snow at Taos Pueblo....
“In 1862, President Abraham Lincoln signed the Morrill Act, which distributed public domain lands to raise funds for fledgling colleges...
There is no love that is not an echo. — Theodor Adorno, Minima Moralia Destruction of a Beloved Place In...