Meet the RC4JustFutures project team & advisors.
We recognize and acknowledge that the University of Pennsylvania stands on the Indigenous territory known as “Lenapehoking,” the traditional homelands of the Lenape, also called Lenni-Lenape or Delaware Indians. These are the people who, during the 1680s, negotiated with William Penn to facilitate the founding of the colony of Pennsylvania. Their descendants today include the Delaware Tribe and Delaware Nation of Oklahoma; the Nanticoke Lenni-Lenape, Ramapough Lenape, and Powhatan Renape of New Jersey; and the Munsee Delaware of Ontario. UPenn Association of Native Alumni
Visit the Native American and Indigenous Studies Program at Penn (Coordinator: Associate Professor of Anthropology, Margaret M. Bruchac)Follow Natives at Penn (NAP) and learn about how NAP creates awareness of Native history and contemporary issues.
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