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Africa Social Work and Development Network | Mtandao waKazi zaJamii naMaendeleo waAfrica
Africa Social Work & Development Network | Mtandao waKazi zaJamii naMaendeleo waAfrika

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YOU ARE HERE » Home » Global » Understanding Indigenous peoples of the Americas
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Understanding Indigenous peoples of the Americas

Posted on 12 March 202622 February 2026 By mugumbatej No Comments on Understanding Indigenous peoples of the Americas

“Seventy five million Indigenous peoples survive across the Americas today. Without colonisation and the resulting death rate of up to 90 per cent from disease and violence, the Indigenous population of the Americas in 1492, conservatively estimated at 50 to 60 million and in some scholarship as high as 100 million, would have continued to grow. At the same historical moment, geographic Europe, is estimated to have had roughly 70 to 90 million people. Today, geographic Europe has approximately 740 million inhabitants. If the surviving ten per cent in the Americas represented roughly 50 million people, a comparable proportional share of today’s global population would exceed 700 million.”

For an African readership shaped by histories of conquest, extraction, missionary intrusion and liberation struggle, the experience of Indigenous peoples of the Americas offers a striking parallel. It is a history of ancient, sophisticated civilisations, the original stewards of the Western Hemisphere, who have spent centuries resisting a unique form of settler colonialism designed not just to rule them, but to replace them.

When we think of the Americas, we often picture skyscrapers, Hollywood or the history of slavery. Yet long before European ships arrived in 1492, the Americas, known by many Indigenous peoples as Turtle Island, were home to thousands of thriving and distinct nations with complex languages, political systems and cultures. Indigenous America is therefore not simply a minority question within modern nation states. It is a foundational question about land, sovereignty, identity and historical truth.

Who are the Indigenous peoples of the Americas?

Indigenous peoples are the original inhabitants of North, Central and South America and the Caribbean. Prior to 1492, the hemisphere was home to tens of millions across highly differentiated societies, urban, agrarian, maritime, nomadic, imperial and confederated.

Civilisations such as the Aztec Empire, the Maya civilization and the Inca Empire developed sophisticated systems of governance, architecture, astronomy, mathematics, agriculture and medicine long before Europe’s so called Age of Discovery. The term discovery itself is epistemologically flawed, one does not discover lands already inhabited by organised polities.

Today, approximately 75 million Indigenous people live across the Americas. In settler dominant states such as the United States and Canada, Indigenous peoples are minorities within political systems built on their dispossession. In contrast, in countries such as Bolivia and Guatemala, Indigenous peoples constitute majorities or near majorities, though demographic strength has not automatically translated into structural power.

Turtle Island: settler colonialism as blueprint

Many Indigenous nations refer to North America as Turtle Island, a cosmological framing that centres land as relational rather than proprietary. The colonisation of this territory became a laboratory for settler colonial governance, later exported globally, including to Africa and the Pacific.

Terra nullius and the legal fiction of emptiness

European powers declared lands empty if they were not enclosed, titled or cultivated according to European agrarian norms. This doctrine, terra nullius, transformed inhabited territories into legally vacant property. Africans will recognise the pattern, similar reasoning justified land seizure in Kenya’s White Highlands, in Zimbabwe’s settler estates and in South Africa’s expropriations. Communal tenure was dismissed as absence of ownership.

The logic of elimination

Settler colonialism differs from extractive colonialism. It seeks permanence. It therefore seeks elimination, physical, cultural or legal. In both the United States and Canada, residential schools aimed to kill the Indian, save the man, a programme of linguistic erasure and spiritual dislocation. Mission schooling in Africa operated on a comparable civilising logic, detach the child from land, language and cosmology, then reconstruct identity in the image of empire.

Reservation systems and spatial containment

The reserve system confined Indigenous nations to marginal territories while freeing fertile lands for settlers. African parallels are evident in the Bantustan architecture of apartheid South Africa and Native Reserves elsewhere. Spatial segregation served economic objectives, land control, labour extraction and political containment.

Decolonisation as an ongoing struggle

Unlike many African states that achieved juridical independence, Indigenous peoples in the Americas often remain within settler colonial states whose foundational sovereignty rests upon their dispossession. Decolonisation is therefore not a completed event, it is a structural contest.

Language and epistemic renewal

Language reclamation moves beyond preservation towards restoration of worldview. The Miami Tribe of Oklahoma has revived the Myaamia language through archival reconstruction and community pedagogy. In Paraguay, Guaraní holds official language status alongside Spanish, an important though incomplete recognition of Indigenous epistemology.

Spiritual recentring

Ceremonies once criminalised, such as the Sun Dance, have re emerged as acts of continuity and sovereignty. Spiritual practice is not folklore, it is governance, ethics and ecological philosophy embedded in ritual.

Land back and sovereignty

The Land Back movement frames land not as commodity but as relational inheritance. In 2023, nearly 1.2 million hectares were returned to Indigenous nations in the United States. While symbolic in proportion to historical dispossession, such returns represent a shift from recognition politics to material restitution.

Identity and public assertion

For centuries, Indian was an imposed classification. Contemporary powwows and cultural festivals are not mere performance, they are political acts of presence. The Stewart Father’s Day Powwow, held annually in Nevada, gathers drummers, dancers and artists from northwestern nations. Such gatherings affirm continuity across generations and resist assimilationist narratives.

Selected cultural events (2026)

  • Voices of The Land, February 2026, Idaho. A community workshop focusing on Indigenous music, regalia and dance traditions.
  • Indigenous Wisdom Retreat, 1 May 2026, New York. A programme led by spiritual mentors exploring Indigenous centred ways of knowing.
  • Stewart Father’s Day Powwow, 19 June 2026, Nevada. An annual celebration featuring intertribal participation.
  • Waší∙šiw ɁitdéɁ Indigenous Culture and Arts Festival, 25 July 2026, California. A celebration of Washoe heritage, language and arts.

Concluding reflection

For Africans, the Indigenous American struggle should not be read as distant sympathy but as comparative insight. Both continents reveal how coloniality persists beyond flags and constitutions. The question is not whether colonisation occurred, it is how deeply its logics remain embedded in land tenure systems, education structures, religious authority and national myth. Decolonisation, in both Africa and the Americas, is therefore not nostalgia. It is a structural reordering of power, knowledge and belonging.

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My name is Okima Innocent Lawrence. I am deeply passionate about social work, community empowerment, and ethical social work practice across Africa. My professional journey over the past eight years has involved community stakeholder engagement, psychosocial support
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My name is Okima Innocent Lawrence. I am deeply passionate about social work, community empowerment, and ethical social work practice across Africa. My professional journey over the past eight years has involved community stakeholder engagement, psychosocial support coordination, survivor restoration, mentorship, and grassroots mobilization. I have worked closely with vulnerable communities, facilitated over 100 stakeholder mentorship engagements, supported survivors of gender-based violence and land injustices, and helped establish women’s support groups.
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