Association on American Indian Affairs
Make a difference DONATE TODAY!
MEMBERSHIP
Association on American Indian Affairs
  • Home
    • About
    • Contact Us
    • 100 Years of Service
    • Internships & Volunteers
    • Job Listings
    • Annual Reports and Financials
  • Our Work
    • Red Hoop Talk
    • Repatriation >
      • Auction Alerts
      • Private Collections and Sales
      • Boarding Schools
      • NAGPRA >
        • NAGPRA Compliance
      • NMAI Act
      • STOP Act
      • Our Letter to Harvard
      • International Repatriation
    • Protect the Sacred >
      • Medicine Wheel
      • DAPL >
        • Association DAPL Amici Brief
      • Protect Oak Flat
      • Eagle Feather Protection
      • Sacred Sites at the Border
      • Bears Ears National Monument
    • Protecting Children and Youth >
      • Indian Child Welfare Act
      • Native Youth Justice
    • Native Youth Summer Camps
    • Scholarships >
      • Scholarship FAQ's
      • Recipients and Graduates
    • Native Peoples and Violence >
      • Resources
      • Missing Indigenous Person
      • Reports
      • Legislation
  • Take Action
    • How You Can Help
    • Newsletter
    • 100 Year Campaign
  • Resources
    • News & Advocacy >
      • Archived News
    • Native Studies List
    • Researching Your Ancestry
  • Events
    • Tribal Museums Day >
      • Public
      • Tribal Museums Map
    • Repatriation Conference

native peoples and violence

​Domestic violence, dating violence, sexual assault, homicide, stalking, and sex trafficking disproportionately affect Indigenous Peoples in relation to other racial and ethnic groups.
Women, girls, and two-spirit individuals are especially impacted by this violence. Most alarming is the reality that 84.3 percent of American Indian and Alaska Native women have experienced violence in their lifetime.

​
The Missing and Murdered Indigenous Peoples crisis has manifested itself on reservations and in urban areas in the United States as well as in Canada and Mexico. Violence against Indigenous peoples is an international crisis.


This working page aims to provide information and resources on issues related to Indigenous peoples and violence, particularly in the U.S. On these pages, you will find current and developing legislation, reports, Tribal and non-Tribal organizations working on these issues, and resources to all who are affected by this crisis.
Picture

Statistics 

  • American Indians and Alaska Natives are 2.5 times as likely to experience violent crimes and at least 2 times more likely to experience rape or sexual assault crimes compared to all other races.
  • More than 4 in 5 American Indian and Alaska Native women, or 84.3 percent, have experienced violence in their lifetime. 
  • ​Homicide is the third leading cause of death among American Indian and Alaska Native women between 10 and 24 years of age and the fifth leading cause of death for American Indian and Alaska Native women between 25 and 34 years of age.
  • In 2017, the top three cities with the highest number of MMIWG cases were Seattle, WA (45); Albuquerque, NM (37); and Anchorage, AK (31). The top three states were New Mexico, Washington, and Arizona.
  • In the U.S. and Canada, an average of 40 percent of the women who were victims of sex trafficking identified as American Indian or Alaskan Native.

Find more information visit the National Institute of Justice, Urban Indian Health Institute, Lakota People's Law Project, and Sovereign Bodies Institute. You can also view our TikTok on MMIWG2S for more insight into this ongoing crisis.
Resources
Missing person tips
Reports
Legislation

​Useful Links


About the Association
Scholarships
Programs
Job Listings
Contact
Privacy Policy
​​

Please note our mailing address change:
Association on American Indian Affairs
6030 Daybreak Circle
Suite A150-217
Clarksville, MD 21029

General Information


​The Association is a not-for-profit 501(c)(3)
publicly supported organization.
​We do not take federal grants.

The Association is governed by an all-Native
Board of Directors and leadership team. 

The Association is an accredited charity and meets all 20 standards of the BETTER BUSINESS BUREAU. 
Picture

The Association has achieved the highest rating - PLATINUM - from GuideStar, now known as Candid​

100 Years of Advocacy


Picture

The Association is celebrating its 100th year of service in Indian Country. We have changed the course of federal Indian law and policy away from termination and genocide towards sovereignty, self-determination and healing. Help us move forward even stronger into our next 100 years!

Site powered by Website Heroes