Join us for an advance book launch, reading and discussion with playwrights and ASU faculty Larissa FastHorse and Michael John Garcés. The book, “Native Nation Project,” includes three plays FastHorse and Garcés created with Indigenous communities, including “Native Nation,” which was produced by ASU Gammage in 2019.

This special event will bring together original cast members and current ASU students to perform a reading, followed by a discussion about the future of the project, moderated by Ty Defoe. Books will be available for purchase and signing.

Come join the Labriola National American Indian Data Center for a poetry workshop focused on "Heart Speak" led by Tanaya Winder. Winder is an author, singer-songwriter, poet and motivational speaker. She is an enrolled citizen of the Duckwater Shoshone Nation and comes from an intertribal lineage of Southern Ute, Pyramid Lake Paiute, Navajo, and Black heritages. Winder earned a Bachelor of Arts in English from Stanford University and a Master of Fine Arts in creative writing from the University of New Mexico.

The Foundations of Open Science offers an introduction to open science and scholarship, exploring its rapid evolution and implications for researchers. In recognition of Open Access Week 2025 and its theme, “Who Owns Our Knowledge?”, this session will examine how communities can take greater ownership of their knowledge. Participants will also reflect on who has access to education and research, where it originates and how knowledge is created and shared.

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