Issue 001 · May 10, 2026
High Country News reports that a 234-mile gas pipeline across Navajo Nation land is moving toward construction after a hearing that community members say they were not adequately notified about. The story echoes Line 5 in its structure: a pipeline company, a federal permitting process, and a tribal community whose consultation rights appear to have been honored in form but not in substance. For the Ice Worlds frame, the Navajo Nation's water and land relationships are as central to its future as manoomin is to the Anishinaabe.
Issue 001 · May 10, 2026
In a striking win for Indigenous land protection, Pete Lien and Sons formally withdrew its permit to drill for graphite near Pe' Sla, the high mountain meadow at the heart of Lakota, Dakota, and Nakota creation stories, after a week of direct action occupation, a federal temporary restraining order, and sustained legal pressure from NDN Collective and allied tribes. NDN Collective's own announcement is the primary source here, and it is worth reading in full: the organization names the specific combination of forces that produced the outcome, which is a model worth studying. The win is real, though the underlying permit framework that allowed the drilling application in the first place remains unchanged.
Issue 001 · May 10, 2026
Grist's Indigenous coverage this week frames the Pe' Sla victory within the larger pattern of Indigenous-led environmental resistance, connecting the Black Hills win to a documented record of Native communities halting or delaying extractive projects. Tristan Ahtone's team at Grist has been building this beat carefully, and the framing here is consistent with the research showing that Indigenous land protection produces measurable climate outcomes. The story is worth reading alongside the NDN Collective primary source.
Issue 001 · May 10, 2026
Native News Online reports that Western states are entering summer with critically low water reserves, with consequences that fall disproportionately on tribal communities whose water rights are often junior in practice even when senior in law. The story does not center tribal voices as strongly as it should, but the underlying conditions it describes are directly relevant to the Ice Worlds frame: water scarcity, disrupted seasonal cycles, and the gap between treaty-protected rights and on-the-ground reality.
Issue 001 · May 10, 2026
Native Sun News Today flags that South Dakota Congressman Dusty Johnson's federal bills to expand Missouri River water use for the state do not address the question of who actually holds water rights in that river system, a question that implicates multiple Oceti Sakowin nations whose treaty territories the Missouri runs through. The piece is a good example of the kind of story that only a Native publication is likely to frame this way: the mainstream coverage of the same bills would almost certainly not lead with tribal water rights.
Issue 001 · May 10, 2026
ICT's account of the Pe' Sla victory is the single best long read of the week, not because it is the longest piece but because it synthesizes the full arc of the fight: the U.S. Forest Service permit issued over tribal objections, the NDN Collective lawsuit alleging NEPA and Religious Freedom Restoration Act violations, the direct-action occupation of the site, the federal temporary restraining order, and finally the withdrawal of the permit by Pete Lien and Sons. ICT names the specific combination of legal, ceremonial, and physical presence that produced the outcome, and it does so with the kind of sourcing that privileges tribal voices over agency statements. Read this alongside the NDN Collective primary release (candidate 7) and the Native Sun News coverage (candidate 132) for the full picture. The story matters beyond its immediate facts: it is a working model of how Indigenous communities can use multiple pressure points simultaneously, and it arrives in a week when Bad River is doing exactly that on Line 5.
Background
· 2023
· madison365
Jon 'White Feather' Greendeer was first elected President of the Ho-Chunk Nation in 2011. In 2023 the Ho-Chunk general electorate returned him to office, this time as a write-in candidate who took 26.1 percent of the primary vote, ousting incumbent Marlon WhiteEagle whose pandemic-era term was marked by gaming shutdowns and budget battles. Greendeer's renewed agenda has centered on the Food is Our Medicine campaign and the Beloit casino build.
Background
· 2023
· wisconsin-state-farmer
Bodwéwadmi Ktëgan, the 126-acre Forest County Potawatomi farm near Laona, was established in 2017 to produce a natural and sustainable source of vegetables, fruits, greens, fish, and animal proteins for tribal members. The operation includes aquaponic greenhouses by Ceres (with a second expanded greenhouse online in August 2025) as well as cattle, chicken, tilapia, bison, honey, and maple syrup, all produced without chemical fertilizer or pesticides. A $200,000 USDA grant supports food-box distribution to tribal members beyond elders.
Background
· 2023
· pbs-wisconsin
After more than three decades of treaty-driven land reacquisition, the Oneida Nation now controls a working portfolio that includes Tsyunhehkwa farm, the Oneida Apple Orchard with roughly 4,500 trees, a bison and Black Angus operation, and restored prairie and wetland sites where poor cropland once stood. Chairman Tehassi Hill has framed the buy-back as a generational obligation: restoring not just acreage but ecosystem function.
Background
· 2022
· indigenous-climate-resilience-network
Research across the Great Lakes region has confirmed that manoomin is now declining roughly 5 to 7 percent annually due to drastic precipitation shifts and rising temperatures, and the species has been deemed the most vulnerable food throughout Anishinaabeg territories. The Bad River sloughs, which hold the largest remaining coastal wild rice bed on the Great Lakes, face accelerating heat, lake-level fluctuation, and algal blooms. Tribal nations are leading restoration grounded in Traditional Ecological Knowledge while agencies belatedly learn from elders.
Background
· 2022
· oneida-nation
Across the past decade the Oneida Nation has restored more than 300 acres of wetlands along Duck Creek, established 30 miles of stream buffers, restored 4,000 feet of ditched stream channels, restored 17 miles of stream passage, and created over 500 acres of new forest. The Prairie Valley project, started in 1995 on land that once produced corn, now hosts 67 species of native grasses and flowers. Trout Creek headwaters work since 2018 has restored another 400 acres of prairie, wetland, and forest.
Background
· 2022
· sunvest
During its Milwaukee casino expansions, the Forest County Potawatomi installed heat-recovery wheels that channel warm air back into the heating system, digital energy monitoring, no-water urinals, low-flow fixtures, and skylighting. The tribe has gone on to anchor multiple solar projects across its Forest County properties through SunVest and the Department of Energy's Office of Indian Energy.
Background
· 2021
· doe-indian-energy
In May 2021 the Bad River Band completed Ishkonige Nawadide, a 500-kilowatt solar array paired with more than 1,000 kilowatt-hours of battery storage powering the Health and Wellness Center, the wastewater treatment plant, and the Chief Blackbird Administration Building. The project was a direct response to the July 2016 flood that knocked out power across the reservation for days and damaged critical infrastructure. Funded through the Department of Energy's Office of Indian Energy.
Background
· 2020
· oneida-nation
Tsyunhehkwa, which translates as Life Sustenance, has grown into the Oneida Nation's flagship sustainable agriculture program. The 80-acre farm near Hobart, directed by Jeff Metoxen, grows white corn and other organic crops, raises grass-fed beef, and serves as an educational model rather than a commercial operation. The nation also runs the Oneida Apple Orchard and a bison and Black Angus operation on land it has bought back.
Background
· 2020
· menominee-tribal-enterprises
Menominee Tribal Enterprises continues to operate the only Native American forest dual-certified by both the Forest Stewardship Council and Scientific Certification Systems. The Menominee Forest, sustainably managed by the tribe for more than 150 years, was among the first to receive FSC certification after the council's 1993 founding, and won United Nations and presidential awards for sustainable development in 1995 and 1996. Three decades on, MTE remains the global reference.
Background
· 2018
· american-forests
Marshall Pecore has served as forest manager for Menominee Tribal Enterprises across the decades that turned the Menominee Forest into the world's reference for sustainable Indigenous forestry. The son and grandson of loggers, Pecore co-authored the canonical Menominee Forestry: Past, Present, Future and is among the most cited Indigenous foresters in North America. The 235,000-acre forest he stewards remains the only Native American forestland with dual FSC and Scientific Certification Systems certification.
Background
· 2018
· us-climate-resilience-toolkit
The College of Menominee Nation's Sustainable Development Institute has built a national reputation since 2009 for tribal climate adaptation research, anchored by an Indigenous six-dimension sustainability framework (land and sovereignty, natural environment, institutions, technology, economy, human perception). SDI led a U.S. Forest Service-supported climate study on the Menominee Forest and now sits at the hub of the Center for First Americans Forestlands partnership, plus the Northeast Climate Science Center.
Background
· 2016
· in-these-times
In 2015 the Ho-Chunk Nation's General Council adopted a resolution to amend the tribal constitution to recognize the rights of nature, becoming the first U.S. tribal nation to take that step. By 2020 a working group was integrating the resolution into the constitution, laws, regulations, and tribal processes. The General Council is the fourth branch of Ho-Chunk government, the body in which all enrolled members vote directly.
Background
· 2014
· wisconsin-academy
Patty followed Indian Nations of Wisconsin with Native People of Wisconsin (2003), a social studies text for younger readers, and Seventh Generation Earth Ethics (2014), profiles of twelve Indigenous Wisconsin stewards including Joe Rose, Dot Davids, and Walter Bresette, which won the Midwest Book Award for Culture. Her PBS documentary Way of the Warrior aired nationally in 2007 and 2011, drawing on her grandfather Edward DeNomie's WWI service with the 32nd Red Arrow Division. The decade between INW editions produced the body of work the third edition now sits alongside.
Background
· 2012
· ramsar
On February 2, 2012, the Kakagon and Bad River Sloughs received Ramsar designation as a Wetland of International Importance, the first such site owned by a tribal nation in the United States. The 16,000-acre complex holds the largest natural wild rice bed on the Great Lakes and the last extensive coastal manoomin bed in the region, critical to the genetic diversity of Lake Superior wild rice. Designation came after years of stewardship work with the Wisconsin Wetlands Association and partners.