Daniel Wildcat: "Exercises of Indigenuity in an Age of Global Crises"

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Feb

2

1:30am

Daniel Wildcat: "Exercises of Indigenuity in an Age of Global Crises"

By Hall Center for the Humanities

Dr. Daniel Wildcat is a professor at Haskell Indian Nations University, and an accomplished scholar who writes on Indigenous knowledge, technology, the environment, and education. He is also a founder of the Haskell Environmental Research Studies Center, which was established with colleagues from the Center for Hazardous Substance Research at Kansas State University. Wildcat helped design a four-part video series entitled All Things Are Connected: The Circle of Life, which deals with the land, air, water, biological, and policy issues facing Native nations. A Yuchi member of the Muscogee Nation of Oklahoma, Wildcat formed the American Indian and Alaska Native Climate Change Working Group, a tribal-college-centered network of individuals and organizations working on climate change issues. In 2008, he helped organize the Planning for Seven Generations climate change conference sponsored by the National Center for Atmospheric Research. He is the author of Red Alert! Saving the Planet with Indigenous Knowledge. Recently, Dr. Wildcat helped procure a $20 million research grant for Haskell from the National Science Foundation for Rising Voices, Changing Coasts: The National Indigenous and Earth Sciences Convergence Hub, the largest research award ever granted by the NSF to a Tribal college or university.

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