In 1999, Patrick Murphy killed George Jacobs in rural Oklahoma. Four years after Murphy was sentenced to death, his public defender unraveled a mystery: Had the murder occurred on the Muscogee ...
Rebecca Nagle will speak about “Justice on Native Land” for Luther College’s annual Farwell Distinguished Lecture at 7 p.m. Tuesday, Sept. 24. Author of the new book By the Fire We Carry (release date ...
Rebecca Nagle has turned the false history of Native American communities she received as a child into a career of truth-driven storytelling. A writer, journalist and author, Nagle is the host of the ...
Rebecca Nagle, an award-winning journalist and citizen of the Cherokee Nation, is the host of Crooked Media’s podcast This Land. The Story of Baby O—and the Case That Could Gut Native Sovereignty The ...
Content warning: This article contains references to abuse and sexual assault. As per Jensen, at the heart of Cherokee-American Rebecca Nagle’s fight to make the American judiciary accessible is a ...
More than 2,100 attendees filled the halls of the David L. Lawrence Convention Center in Pittsburgh for the Association of College and Research Libraries (ACRL) Conference, held March 15–18. The theme ...
Rebecca Nagle wants to talk about what’s missing in media. An award-winning journalist based in Tahlequah, Okla., and a citizen of the Cherokee Nation, Nagle asserts erasure is among the main forms of ...
That's how Nagle begins her new book and how she frames the version of history she's telling. The book digs into the past and future of Native... Spitting on Andrew Jackson's grave with Rebecca Nagle ...
Rebecca Nagle is the September Writer-in-Residence at the Good Hart Artist Residency in Harbor Springs. Nagle is an award-winning journalist and a citizen of Cherokee Nation. Her debut book, "By the ...
Only 7% of LAist readers currently donate to fund our journalism. Help raise that number, so our nonprofit newsroom stays strong in the face of federal cuts. Donate now. A major ruling today from the ...
Today, in a 7-2 vote, the Supreme Court upheld the Indian Child Welfare Act. The law gives priority to tribes when Native children are adopted. Writing for the majority, Justice Amy Coney Barrett said ...