It was unknown if Emily Pike made it home or how close she got. On Feb. 14, her dismembered remains were found in a pair of heavy-duty trash bags.
The Moose Hide Campaign, designed to end gender and children based violence, will come to Fort St. John on May 15th.
Today, The Coalition to Stop Violence Against Native Women hosted its Breaking Cycles of Violence Conference. The conference was held from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. near Rio Rancho, New Mexico.
Party claims a "crisis of accountability" in province's child and youth welfare system and "broader systemic failures that ...
A Native American tribe in southeastern Arizona is urging stricter oversight of state-licensed group homes after police found ...
Sometimes I feel like a fake Indian,” said Margie Sterling, of rural Exeter. A member of the Navajo Nation, Margie was ...
At the heart of this vision is empowering the next generation of young women and girls – because when women lead, they don’t just change their own lives, they transform their families, communities and ...
Slain Arizona girl Emily Pike reportedly didn’t want to return to a Mesa group home, over a year before police found her ...
Surrey, Penticton and several communities on Vancouver Island are among the main beneficiaries of 770 new $10-per-day ...
THUNDER BAY — A locally written musical was on the mainstage at Magnus Theatre on Friday, for an audience made up mainly of ...
South Australia convened a Royal Commission into Family Violence amid concern about a spike in domestic violence related ...
Civilians in Catatumbo have been victimized twice—first by the absence of the State, and then by armed groups who fill that void with terror,” the statement read.
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