Campus Programs
Indigenous Studies
Gain interdisciplinary skills to conduct theoretical and applied research and develop creative solutions to issues facing Indigenous communities.
Tribal Judicial Support Clinic
In the Tribal Judicial Support Clinic at KU Law, students work on research projects for tribal courts. Past projects include tribal code development, legal research, drafting legal memoranda and drafting judicial orders. Clinic students have opportunities to meet with tribal attorneys and judges at tribal headquarters. Through the clinic, students have done groundbreaking work for local tribes.
Haskell/KU Exchange Program
A wonderful opportunity for both Haskell Indian Nations University students and University of Kansas students to take classes at either KU or Haskell while remaining a full-time student at their home campus.
KU Native Storytelling Workshop
The KU Native Storytelling workshop amplifies Native voices through journalism by bringing together Indigenous high school students from across the country to the KU campus. Students spend four days at KU as they are introduced to the field of journalism and explore ways that storytelling skills offer opportunities to give back to their communities.
Sloan Indigenous Graduate Partnership and Sloan Undergraduate Scholars Program
Sloan at KU supports Indigenous students pursuing STEM (science, technology, engineering and math) degrees. The project aims to increase the number of Indigenous students — American Indians, Alaska Natives, Native Hawaiians and other Pacific Islanders — attaining graduate and undergraduate degrees in STEM fields.
Tribal Law & Government Center
Founded in 1995, the Tribal Law & Government Center at KU Law aims to prepare a new generation of advocates for careers representing Indigenous peoples
Good Morning Indian Country
Good Morning Indian Country is a Native, student-led weekly news and information program produced in partnership by students at the University of Kansas and Haskell Indian Nations University.
Culturally Responsive Early Literacy Intervention (CRELI)
Since 2020, the CRELI grant continues to serve the Native American community in Northeast Kansas by supporting early language and literacy development and culturally responsive instruction.