North Atlantic Books

Land Back Resilience Tool

While the concept of Land Back has existed since white settlers first violently stole Indigenous lands, the contemporary Land Back movement began over a decade ago as culture bearers and artisans disseminated the idea through art. The movement has recently gained visibility and traction thanks to land and water defenders, digital activists, and organizations like NDN Collective, who launched the LANDBACK campaign on Indigenous Peoples’ Day 2020. Today’s movement builds upon many generations of effort across Turtle Island and beyond to address the roots of colonization and reclaim stolen Indigenous lands.

The Land Back movement is not a monolith. For some, Land Back is literal; as Lakota matriarch Madonna Thunder Hawk says, “The only reparation for land is land.” For others, Land Back is primarily about sovereignty and cultural reclamation. Krystal Two Bulls, the director of NDN Collective’s LANDBACK campaign, offers specific demands that encompass both: (1) to return all public lands back to Indigenous hands, (2) to dismantle the white-supremacist structures that keep Indigenous peoples oppressed, (3) to defund and dismantle the systems that disconnect Indigenous folks from the stewardship of land, including the police, military, and border patrol, and (4) to shift policy from consultation to free, prior, and informed consent. 

While there’s still a long way to go until the demands outlined by Two Bulls are met, there are countless examples of land and water return unfolding around the country, from a farmer in so-called Nebraska signing a deed returning ancestral tribal land back to the Ponca Tribe to the Eureka City Council voting unanimously to transfer ownership of the sacred Duluwat Island to the Wiyot Tribe. There is no singular, straightforward land return process, but more and more replicable Land Back models are emerging, including community land trusts, deed transfers, dam removal, co-management, and voluntary land taxes, among others. 

The Land Back movement is increasingly being recognized as a cornerstone of environmental and climate justice, particularly since Indigenous peoples are proven stewards of lands, waters, and skies; Indigenous peoples comprise just 6 percent of the world’s population, but Indigenous-managed lands protect approximately 80 percent of the world’s biodiversity. To prevent future ecological harm and repair the harm that has been done, it’s imperative that relationships between Indigenous peoples and their ancestral homelands are restored. 

To support and accelerate the Land Back movement as a settler on stolen lands:

 

 

 

 

 

Excerpt from Climate Resilience: How We Keep Each Other Safe, Care for Our Communities, and Fight Back Against Climate Change

 

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