This site was created by GLIFWC/Sea Grant intern Morgan Coleman as part of her projects on Great Lakes Literacy and Ojibwe culture. Additional contributions by Anne Moser from Wisconsin Sea Grant and Hannah Arbuckle from GLIFWC. Updates and resources added by Maya Reinfeldt, undergraduate student at UW Madison.
The Great Lakes Indian Fish and Wildlife Commission is an intertribal agency composed of eleven Ojibwe tribes in Minnesota, Wisconsin, and Michigan. GLIFWC's purpose is to assist its member tribes in exercising their reservation treaty rights to hunt, fish, and gather in the territories ceded in the 1836, 1837, 1842, and 1854 Treaties.
Visit the GLIFWC to learn more.
Wisconsin Sea Grant is the University of Wisconsin-Madison branch of the National Sea Grant College Program. Wisconsin Sea Grant's mission is to promote sustainable use of Great Lakes resources through research, education, and outreach.
Visit Wisconsin Sea Grant to learn more.
Morgan Coleman is a recent graduate of the University of Wisconsin-River Falls with a Bachelor's degree in English. She is now pursuing a Master's degree at the University of St. Thomas in St. Paul, Minnesota.
Maya Reinfeldt was a library assistant in 2021 and 20223 and was then the Community Engaged Intern in the library during the summer of 2022. She is now Badger Talks Coordinator at UW Madison. She graduated from UW Madison with BA with Honors in International Studies and Russian Literature.