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The history of indigenous women in this country has been undeniably stained by centuries of brutality at the hands of their oppressors. For too long, laws and policies in the United States have denied Indigenous women the basic human rights of bodily autonomy, self-advocacy, and justice -- all of which they are entitled to as a basic human right. The ripple effects of this long-standing abuse, mainstream ambivalence toward the problem, and lack of accountability for these crimes can still be felt today.
Indigenous Slavery - 64 Parishes
Violence Against Native Peoples - Association on American Indian Affairs
The Indigenous World 2022: Indigenous Data Sovereignty - IWGIA - International Work Group for Indigenous Affairs
Interviews in the social sciences
Violent victimization and perceptions of safety: Experiences of First Nations, Métis and Inuit women in Canada
Violence Against Women Act - NNEDV
Data collections - WHO
Deaths of despair and Indigenous data genocide - The Lancet
What Will It Take to End Violence Against Native Women? - Boston Review
The U.S. criminal justice system disproportionately hurts Native people: the data, visualized