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Dakota Access Pipeline protests - Wikipedia

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dakota_Access_Pipeline_protests
The #NoDAPL hashtag began to trend on social media, and the camps at Standing Rock gradually grew to thousands of people. Protests. Conflict between water protectors and law enforcement escalated through the summer and fall. In September 2016, construction workers bulldozed a section of privately owned land which the tribe had claimed as sacred

Standing Rock Sioux and Dakota Access Pipeline | Teacher Resource

https://americanindian.si.edu/nk360/plains-treaties/dapl
Learn about the controversy over the construction of the Dakota Access Pipeline (DAPL) and how it affects the Standing Rock Sioux Tribe and their treaty rights. Explore the perspectives, sources, and actions of the protesters, the pipeline company, and the government.

#NoDAPL Archive - Standing Rock Water Protectors - No Dakota Access

https://www.nodaplarchive.com/
A comprehensive website that documents the struggles and achievements of the water protectors at Standing Rock against the Dakota Access Pipeline. Find interviews, videos, photos, articles, court cases, actions, and more related to #NoDAPL.

#noDAPL - #MoveMe

https://moveme.studentorg.berkeley.edu/project/nodapl/
#NoDAPL is a social media campaign for the fight against the planned construction of the Dakota Access Pipeline through the sacred Indian Reservation lands called Standing Rock Indian Reservation. The notable impact and success of the #NoDAPL Movement has modernized and changed the way social movements can use social media to their advantage

The #NoDAPL movement was powerful, factual, and Indigenous-led. Lawsuit

https://ccrjustice.org/home/blog/2018/02/21/nodapl-movement-was-powerful-factual-and-indigenous-led-lawsuit-lies-can-t
Learn about the #NoDAPL movement, a grassroots campaign that opposed the construction of the Dakota Access Pipeline on Indigenous land and water. Read how Energy Transfer Partners sued environmental groups, including Earth First!, for spreading misinformation and terrorism.

How to Talk About #NoDAPL: A Native Perspective | Truthout

https://truthout.org/articles/how-to-talk-about-nodapl-a-native-perspective/
A Native writer shares a reflection on the Dakota Access pipeline issue and the ongoing struggle against colonial violence. She urges people to center the Native right to defend their water and lives, and to acknowledge the history and impacts of anti-Native policies.

Law Enforcement Descended On Standing Rock A Year Ago And Changed the

https://theintercept.com/2017/10/27/law-enforcement-descended-on-standing-rock-a-year-ago-and-changed-the-dapl-fight-forever/
A year after the October 27, 2016, eviction of the Treaty Camp, The Intercept reveals the details of the raid and its impact on the NoDAPL movement. The article features police bodycam and aerial footage, interviews, and historical context of the native resistance to the pipeline.

For Native 'water protectors,' Standing Rock protest has ... - PBS

https://www.pbs.org/newshour/nation/military-force-criticized-dakota-access-pipeline-protests
Indigenous activists, known as water protectors, oppose the pipeline that crosses the Missouri River near Standing Rock Sioux reservation. They face arrest, pepper spray and violence from law enforcement in a fight for religious freedom and human rights.

Key Moments In The Dakota Access Pipeline Fight - NPR

https://www.npr.org/sections/thetwo-way/2017/02/22/514988040/key-moments-in-the-dakota-access-pipeline-fight
February 22, 20174:28 PM ET. Rebecca Hersher. People protesting the Dakota Access Pipeline demonstrate at the Standing Rock Sioux Reservation in North Dakota on Thanksgiving Day 2016. Cassi

The Dakota Access Pipeline — The Indigenous Foundation

https://www.theindigenousfoundation.org/articles/the-dakota-access-pipeline
The #NoDAPL campaign movement was established in April 2016, by activists of the Standing Rock Sioux Tribe at the start of the construction of the pipeline. The movement began with protests which developed into encampments located on and off the Standing Rock Sioux Reservation. Allies and supporters demonstrated their support through marches

How young Native Americans built and sustained the #NoDAPL movement

https://mashable.com/article/standing-rock-nodapl-youth
Learn how Indigenous youth used social media to raise awareness and mobilize support for the Standing Rock Sioux Tribe's fight against the Dakota Access Pipeline. See how they celebrated the historic victory in December 2016 and what challenges they face ahead.

Standing with Standing Rock: Voices from the #NoDAPL Movement ... - JSTOR

https://www.jstor.org/stable/10.5749/j.ctvr695pq
One evening in October 2016, before the violent eviction of the 1851 Treaty Camp on Highway 1806 on October 27, Nick Estes was invited to a strategy session at Prairie Knights Casino, near Cannon Ball, North Dakota. Phyllis Young, a former Standing Rock councilwoman and a longtime member of the American Indian Movement, led the meeting.

Art, Affect, and Social Media in the 'No Dakota Access Pipeline

https://journals.sagepub.com/doi/10.1177/02632764221146715
Indigenous-led activism against proposed oil pipelines has relied heavily on social media, particularly Twitter, as in the #NoDAPL campaign. Resistance to the building of the Dakota Access Pipeline also relied on affective response: a sense of shared nationhood, forged through histories of anticolonial activism, as well as a more-than-human sense of community and responsibility.

Introduction: Standing Rock, #NoDAPL, and Mni Wiconi

https://culanth.org/fieldsights/introduction-standing-rock-no-dapl-and-mni-wiconi
The #NoDAPL struggle is a continuation of the nineteenth-century Indian wars of extermination. It is the classic settler-colonial scenario: Natives are seen as impediments to progress, which therefore must be eliminated. Put simply, Indians block unrestricted capitalist accumulation. It is no coincidence that the main police force, the Morton

#NoDAPL Solidarity - Support the Indigenous led movement to stop the

https://nodaplsolidarity.org/
This site is dedicated to supporting the indigenous led resistance to the Dakota Access Pipeline. We hope that this site will make it easier for allies from around the world to take action against the institutions that are attempting to construct the pipeline. Please join in taking sustained action in solidarity with Standing Rock.

NoDAPL Legacy: Standing Rock's Anpetu Wi Wind Farm

https://www.kxnet.com/news/local-news/nodapl-legacy-standing-rocks-anpetu-wi-wind-farm/
NoDAPL helped get the project financially off the ground. "So at the time of NoDAPL, Chairman Archamboldt got an award of $200,000 from Wallace Global Fund for the work we did with NoDAPL, the work we did with the environment, and he talked to me and he said I want this earmarked for the Wind Farm," said Fawn Wasin Zi, the SAGE Development

#NoDAPL - Kyle Whyte

https://kylewhyte.seas.umich.edu/nodapl/
Standing Rock, #NoDAPL, and Mni Wiconi (short essay collection) Fighting for our Lives: #NoDAPL in Historical Context. #NoDAPL: Updates, Resources, and Reflections. #NoDAPL Online Essays and Articles. To Save the Water - We Must Break the Cycle of Colonial Trauma. Why the Founder of Standing Rock Sioux Camp Can't Forget the Whitestone Massacre

Cashing in on Standing Rock - High Country News

https://www.hcn.org/issues/50-6/tribal-affairs-cashing-in-on-standing-rock/
The #NoDAPL movement had begun earlier that year, in response to the proposed construction of a controversial oil pipeline near the Standing Rock Sioux Reservation in North Dakota. Even as the

Fighting for Our Lives: #NoDAPL in Historical Context

https://therednation.org/fighting-for-our-lives-nodapl-in-context/
#NoDAPL anti-colonial struggle is profoundly anti-capitalist. It is the frontline. It is the future. The profits that corporations like Energy Transfer Corporation reap from colonial projects like the DAPL should be seized and used to repair damage to the land and river. With this also comes a long-term goal to restore the Missouri River to its

What Happened After Standing Rock? - BuzzFeed News

https://www.buzzfeednews.com/article/katebubacz/what-happened-after-standing-rock
The #NoDAPL movement at Standing Rock was forced to disband on Feb. 26, 2017, having failed to stop construction of a controversial oil pipeline that threatened the waters of the Missouri, Mississippi, and Big Sioux rivers and crossed through land sacred to the Lakota people. Despite this failure, the movement around it ignited changes that are

Shailene Woodley stands up for Indigenous, environmental rights

https://www.greenbaypressgazette.com/story/news/native-american-issues/2021/04/08/shailene-woodley-stands-up-indigenous-environmental-rights/4823096001/
The music video "Stand Up/Stand N Rock #NoDapl" features several Indigenous artists, including Taboo from the Black Eyed Peas, Supaman and Drezus. It won an MTV Video Music Award in 2017 for

NoDAPL (@NoDAPL) / Twitter

https://twitter.com/NoDAPL
NoDAPL.life Joined August 2016. 71 Following. 49.6K Followers. Tweets. Replies. Media. Likes @NoDAPL hasn't Tweeted. When they do, their Tweets will show up here.

Back 40 Mine Info

https://noback40.com/
As a result of our undeniable ties and long occupation of the Menominee River area, we have numerous sacred sites and burial mounds up and down the Menominee River, including the area of the proposed Back Forty Mine. Much like our brothers and sister in the NODAPL movement we also know that water is essential to life.