From Cultural Survival <[email protected]>
Subject 4 Actions to Take on Int'l Day of the World's Indigenous Peoples
Date August 9, 2025 3:00 PM
  Links have been removed from this email. Learn more in the FAQ.
  Links have been removed from this email. Learn more in the FAQ.
4 Calls to Action for International Day of the World's Indigenous Peoples
View this email in your browser ([link removed])
[link removed] Share ([link removed])
[link removed] Share ([link removed])
[link removed] Forward ([link removed])
[link removed] https%3A%2F%2Fmailchi.mp%2Fculturalsurvival.org%2Fwipd2025 Tweet ([link removed] https%3A%2F%2Fmailchi.mp%2Fculturalsurvival.org%2Fwipd2025)
Support our work ([link removed])
[link removed]
En Español ([link removed])

Today is International Day of the World’s Indigenous Peoples (August 9). Every day, we honor the sovereignty, richness, and beauty of Indigenous Peoples, languages, and lifeways.
The first meeting of the United Nations Working Group on Indigenous Populations was held in Geneva, Switzerland, on August 9, 1982. Since then, many spaces have opened up for Indigenous voices to be heard, and new agreements protecting the rights of Indigenous Peoples have been adopted. While we celebrate these outcomes, we also recognize that the promise of human rights for Indigenous Peoples worldwide remains unfulfilled. In many parts of the world, Indigenous Peoples are still facing grave human rights abuses and challenges.

This year's theme is "Indigenous Peoples and AI: Defending Rights, Shaping Futures."

As our Executive Director, Aimee Roberson (Choctaw and Chickasaw) says, "Indigenous Traditional Knowledge systems are grounded in place and developed over many generations, hundreds, sometimes thousands of years. Indigenous Knowledge is shared and verified in community and governed by traditional systems that respect all life and Mother Earth and accept our responsibility to care for each other. This is Indigenous intelligence because we know that we are all interrelated and that one of us cannot thrive unless we are all thriving. Artificial Intelligence is scraping information from all over the internet, stealing intellectual property and images, often without attributing their sources. It's full of bias, unregulated, and has the potential to cause a lot of harm in the form of completely leaving out Indigenous perspectives and knowledge, in the form of appropriating our knowledge without consent, taking things out of context, and creating misunderstanding. Artificial Intelligence is being
used for surveillance. The biases, the gaps in knowledge, and things we don't understand are used to make decisions that harm people. It's possible that AI could be used in a more thoughtful and respectful way if Indigenous people are included in every step of the process....Data sovereignty is critical."

We call on states, policymakers, and corporations to:
* listen to Indigenous people and respect Indigenous sovereignty;
* uphold and implement the United Nations Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples;
* protect the ecosystems we all depend on;
* include Indigenous Peoples in shaping the future of technology;
* support land back initiatives allowing Indigenous Peoples to reclaim and steward their homelands; and
* find real solutions to the climate crises that don’t just greenwash increased energy consumption.

Indigenous Peoples, our values, and knowledge systems hold solutions to today’s greatest challenges, including climate change, ecocide, and biodiversity loss. But all too often, we are not listened to, consulted, nor given seats at the tables where important decisions that impact us are being made.
At Cultural Survival, we are working around the world and around the clock to support the priorities of Indigenous Nations and communities that are protecting Mother Earth for generations to come and for the millions of people, plant, animal, and mineral relatives that share our homelands.


** 4 Calls to Action for International Day of the World's Indigenous Peoples
------------------------------------------------------------
[link removed]


** 1. Know the Facts about Artificial Intelligence!
------------------------------------------------------------
Artificial Intelligence is not “intelligence.” You can’t build an AI without the data. Energy consumption by data centers is so astronomical that their existence would foreclose the possibility of ever reaching carbon emission goals.

Read: Refusing Artificial Intelligence and Nuclear “Manifest Destiny” ([link removed])

Read: Indigenous Peoples and AI: Defending Rights, Shaping the Future of Technology ([link removed])

[link removed]
Aimee Roberson (Choctaw and Chickasaw), Executive Director of Cultural Survival, on World Indigenous Peoples' Day 2025

[link removed]
Kate Finn, Executive Director of Tallgrass Institute, on World Indigenous Peoples' Day 2025

[link removed]
Galina Angarova (Buryat), Executive Director of the SIRGE Coalition, on World Indigenous Peoples' Day


** 2. Share the Statistics!
------------------------------------------------------------

Support Indigenous communities who are facing threats from mining for transition minerals, AI data centers, and nuclear energy development.

Three years ago today, Cultural Survival ([link removed]) , Tallgrass Institute ([link removed]) , Batani Foundation
([link removed]) , Earthworks
([link removed]) , Voices ([link removed]) , and IWGIA
([link removed]) joined forces to launch the SIRGE Coalition ([link removed]) dedicated to Securing Indigenous Peoples' Rights in the Green Economy. SIRGE urges governments, corporations, and financial decision-makers to safeguard Indigenous Peoples' rights and self-determination in the energy transition and to avoid the mistakes and harms of past resource development.

Recent statistics:
Indigenous territories contain significant amounts of untapped heavy metal reserves around the world, putting Indigenous lands and communities at risk.
* Indigenous communities continue to be disproportionately impacted by mining for transition minerals, as 54% of deposits are located on or near Indigenous Peoples’ lands and territories. With 18 new cases of reported impacts on Indigenous Peoples and 77 across all years ([link removed]) , Indigenous Peoples are negatively affected by an unchecked acceleration in mining for transition minerals.

Every day, Indigenous leaders risk their lives to protect their territories from mining.
* Some 835 allegations of human rights abuses have now been linked to the mineral extraction of these minerals since 2010, including 77 linked ([link removed]) to Indigenous Peoples' rights, including 48 cases of abuse of the right to Free, Prior Informed Consent.
* In 2023, 49% of murdered environmental or land defenders ([link removed]) were Indigenous or Afro-descendants, a disproportionately high figure given that Indigenous Peoples comprise roughly 6% of the global population.
* In 2023, 41% of attacks ([link removed]) against Indigenous Peoples were related to mining.

Governments and companies must observe and implement the rights of Indigenous Peoples, including the right to Free, Prior and Informed Consent, outlined in the United Nations Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples.
[link removed]


** 3. Share Stories from Impacted Indigenous Peoples!
------------------------------------------------------------

🎙️Listen to radio programs and podcasts ([link removed]) on the impacts of transition mineral mining and the SIRGE Coalition in English, Spanish, Quechua, and Nahuatl from Cultural Survival’s Indigenous Rights Radio.

📖Read about how mining for transition minerals is affecting Indigenous communities.
* Honoring Lost Lands and Defending the Future: Sámi Youth Resistance in Kiruna, Sweden ([link removed])
* Science and Tradition Unite to Fight a Giant Copper Mine in Ecuador ([link removed])
* A Rebel Priest, A Crusading Lawyer, and A Canadian Mining Company ([link removed])
* Indigenous Water Defenders Take on a Canadian Mining Giant ([link removed])
* Cassiterite Mining in Lemera: A Fight for Pygmy Land Rights ([link removed])
* Tabanok Audiovisual School Amplifies Inga and Kamëntsá Voices Against Extractive Industries in Colombia ([link removed])
* Mining Boom Leaves Indigenous Batwa in Poverty ([link removed])
* Indigenous Voices Rise Above the Din of Mining in North Sulawesi ([link removed])
* Free, Prior and Informed Consent: Youth Fellows Fighting for Indigenous Rights ([link removed])
* Indigenous Peoples and the Car Industry: How Hyundai Harms Indigenous Peoples Throughout the Americas ([link removed])
* ‘Canadian Companies Destroy in the Name of Canada’ ([link removed])
* Bullets and Beatings Support Canadian Mines ([link removed])
* Sámi People Oppose Copper Mine in Norway ([link removed])
* Strengthening Bonds to Resist Lithium Extraction: Pankararú-Pataxó Peoples in Brazil ([link removed])
* Indigenous Resistance to a Made-in-Canada Mine ([link removed])
* A Canadian Mining Giant vs. the Guardians of the Amazon ([link removed])
* Resisting Lithium Mining and Strengthening Food Sovereignty: Quilombola Community in Girau, Brazil ([link removed])
* Destroying Green to Produce "Green Futures": Seeking Alternatives to Copper Mining through Community-led Tourism Plans in Panama ([link removed])
* Stop Ambler Road: The River Is Our Bread and Butter ([link removed])
* Minahasa's Cry: Indigenous Voices Rise Against Mining Onslaught in Indonesia ([link removed])
* Tahua’s Visions for the Future: Fighting for Community Tourism over Lithium Extraction ([link removed])
* The Road to Tahua: Journeying to Heart of the Lithium Triangle via Sacred Salt Flats ([link removed])

[link removed]


** 4. Learn more about International Day of the World's Indigenous Peoples!
------------------------------------------------------------

The annual International Day of the World's Indigenous Peoples ([link removed]) launched with a virtual commemoration on Friday, 8 August 9am EST!

This year the theme of the International Day of the World’s Indigenous Peoples is "Indigenous Peoples and AI: Defending Rights, Shaping Futures"
🔗 Watch the recording here. ([link removed])


Support Indigenous-led solutions and leadership! ([link removed])


** Join us!
------------------------------------------------------------
[link removed]

============================================================
** Facebook ([link removed])
** LinkedIn ([link removed])
** Instagram ([link removed])
** Threads ([link removed])
** SoundCloud ([link removed])
** Twitter ([link removed])
** Website ([link removed])
** ([link removed])

2067 Massachusetts Avenue
Cambridge, MA 02140
(617) 441-5400
www.cs.org


Cultural Survival advocates for Indigenous Peoples' rights and supports Indigenous communities’ self-determination, cultures and political resilience since 1972. We envision a future that respects and honors Indigenous Peoples' inherent rights and dynamic cultures, deeply and richly interwoven in lands, languages, spiritual traditions, and artistic expression, rooted in self-determination and self-governance.

Want to change how you receive these emails?

You can ** Unsubscribe from this list ([link removed])
or ** Update your preferences ([link removed])

Want to stop receiving anything from us? ** Unsubscribe from ALL of Cultural Survival's lists. ([link removed])
Screenshot of the email generated on import

Message Analysis