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Today, the Climate Generation team is celebrating and acknowledging Indigenous People’s Day across Turtle Island (North and Central America).

The Indigenous peoples of the Climate Generation team have pulled together some resources they would love to share with you –– our community –– to dive into and explore on this holiday and beyond.

While one day doesn’t do justice to the genocide that happened to Indigenous people throughout the world, on this day we can center Indigenous voices, campaigns, and demands. We can draw from the strengths of their teachings and our interconnectedness with each other and the earth.

“One Earth, One Mother. One does not sell the Earth the People walk upon.” — John Trudeau

Indigenous Organizations to Support and Engage With

NDN Collective
NDN Collective is an Indigenous-led organization dedicated to building Indigenous power. Through organizing, activism, philanthropy, grantmaking, capacity-building and narrative change, we are creating sustainable solutions on Indigenous terms.

Honor the Earth
Honor the Earth’s mission is to create awareness and support for Native environmental issues and to develop needed financial and political resources for the survival of sustainable Native communities. Honor the Earth develops these resources by using music, the arts, the media, and Indigenous wisdom to ask people to recognize our joint dependency on the Earth and be a voice for those not heard.

Indigenous Environmental Network
IEN was formed by grassroots Indigenous peoples and individuals to address environmental and economic justice issues (EJ). IEN’s activities include building the capacity of Indigenous communities and tribal governments to develop mechanisms to protect our sacred sites, land, water, air, natural resources, health of both our people and all living things, and to build economically sustainable communities.

Indigenous Climate Action
Indigenous Climate Action (ICA) is an Indigenous-led organization guided by a diverse group of Indigenous knowledge keepers, water protectors and land defenders from communities and regions across the country

Indigenous Rights and the Climate Crisis

Sacred Places Preservation

Explore how the Native Organizers Alliance is protecting sacred places, medicines, burials, ancestors, cultural items, and ceremonial ways to ensure Indigenous voices and representation are centered regarding Indigenous rights, freedoms, and ways of life.

4 Fossil Fuel Projects that Harm Indigenous Communities

On the heels of Climate Week NYC, read about the fossil fuel projects that are currently threatening Indigenous communities while contributing to the climate crisis — from the lands of the Standing Rock Sioux Tribe to the Greater Chaco Canyon, located in the ancestral homelands of the Diné and Pueblo peoples.

Here are 3 places to watch the Land Back movement unfold in 2023

The Land Back movement calls for the acknowledgement and return of Indigenous sovereignty over traditional territories. Educate yourself on the movements happening from northern Manitoba to Hawaii to the Black Hills of South Dakota.

Keep Reading: Books and Media from Indigenous Voices

Native Authors + Banned Books
The Banned Books Book Club monitors currently banned books from Native authors. Commit to reading one — or all — of them and explore the associated reading guides for students for each title.

While Indigenous | NDN Collective
Plug in your earbuds and listen to NDN Collective’s podcast, While Indigenous. As a starter, ]we recommend the Indigenous People’s Day episode from 2018.

The post Honoring Indigenous People’s Day appeared first on Climate Generation.

Honoring Indigenous People’s Day

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Trump Officials, Billionaires and the Quiet Reshaping of America’s Public Lands

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A controversial land swap orchestrated by the megarich could be “a harbinger of what’s to come” for public lands under Trump.

This story is from Floodlight, and produced in partnership with High Country News. Sign up for HCN’s newsletter here.

Trump Officials, Billionaires and the Quiet Reshaping of America’s Public Lands

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REPORT: The Hidden Risks of Plastic Pouches for Baby Food

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It’s been less than 20 years since baby food in plastic pouches first appeared on supermarket shelves. Since then, these convenient and popular “squeeze-and-suck” products have become the dominant packaging for baby food, transforming the way that millions of babies are fed around the world. But emerging evidence raises concerns that big food brands are feeding our children plastic pollution with unknown consequences, by selling baby food in flexible plastic packaging.

Testing commissioned by Greenpeace International in 2025 found plastic particles in the baby food products of two global consumer goods companies – Danone and Nestlé. The study suggests a link between the type of plastic the pouches are lined with – polyethylene – and some of the microplastics found. Tests also suggest a range of plastic-associated chemicals in the packaging and food of both products.



Underwater image of a turtle with plastic on his head.


Sign the petition for a strong Global Plastics Treaty

Governments around the world are now negotiating a Global Plastics Treaty – an agreement that could solve the planetary crisis brought by runaway plastic production. Let’s end the age of plastic – sign the petition for a strong Global Plastics Treaty now.


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REPORT: The Hidden Risks of Plastic Pouches for Baby Food

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Climate Change

U.N. General Assembly Embraces Court Opinion That Says Nations Have a Legal Obligation to Take Climate Action

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The U.S. was among eight countries that voted against endorsing the nonbinding ruling that said all nations must take steps to limit temperature rise to 1.5 degrees Celsius.

The United Nations General Assembly on Wednesday voted overwhelmingly in favor of a climate justice resolution championed by the small Pacific Island nation of Vanuatu. The resolution welcomes the historic advisory opinion on climate change issued by the International Court of Justice in July 2025 and calls upon U.N. member states to act upon the court’s unanimous guidance, which clarified that addressing the climate crisis is not optional but rather is a legal duty under multiple sources of international law.

U.N. General Assembly Embraces Court Opinion That Says Nations Have a Legal Obligation to Take Climate Action

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