December 2024: Land as Reparations

In HCN’s December issue, people, animals and the land itself struggle to reclaim and restore their territory. A Black family is denied access to their own property in California, raising questions about the role of land in reparations, while a New Mexico writer works to restore a forest after a devastating wildfire. The Navajo Nation fights border-town bigotry in Farmington, New Mexico, and in Denver, Colorado, immigrants launch a new rideshare co-op. Salmon reclaim waterways above the former site of the Klamath River dams, while scientists expand their knowledge of the Pacific brant, North America’s favorite goose. What do pension funds have to do with Oregon clear-cuts? Climate change is bringing extremely weird weather to the Western U.S. Exponent II, a magazine for Mormon feminists, celebrates 50 years of stirring the pot. Rez Ball is a breakthrough in basketball movies: a family-friendly Indigenous movie, made by Indigenous people. Finally, how a little-known painter of gay erotica helped blue jeans become sexy.


California’s approach to Black reparations shifts toward land access, ownership and stewardship.


Devastation is hard to face, but turning away is harder.


It’s a reservation border town problem, not just a local one.


Tech advances are transforming knowledge and conservation of North America’s favorite goose.


Lax state regulations create a timber bonanza for institutional investors.


When assessing the region, not much was normal but climate change.


For 50 years, ‘Exponent II‘ has made the LDS Church squirm. It has no plans to stop.


The artist George Quaintance painted some of the first erotic depictions of denim.


A poem by Carolina Hotchandani.


#iamthewest: Giving voice to the people that make up communities in the region.


Mishaps and mayhem from around the region.


HCN will continue bringing the West together and defending the places within the region.


What it’s like to witness the first run of fish above the removed dams in over a century.


It’s more important than ever for us to be truth-tellers.


A new alternative to Uber and Lyft aspires to give workers more income and more say over their working conditions.


The latest Indigenous Netflix film shows the challenges of Native life through the culture of rez ball.


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