
Amanda Blackhorse led a protest against Yandy.com’s offensive Native American costumes fromthe top of a car while

Red dresses have become the symbol of the Missing and Murdered Indigenous Women movement. Prayer sticks were displayed with one of the i:pud dresses at a planning meeting for the 2018 Women’s Prayer Run. (Photo by Carly Henry/Cronkite News)

Pam Thomson carried the red i:pud dress representing missing and murdered indigenous women as the group prepares to leave on the second day of the annual Women’s Prayer Run. (Photo by Carly Henry/Cronkite News)





Terry Clark has his portrait taken by Samuel MacDonald André House. Macdonald takes portraits of guests. For some, the portraits are the only printed photos they have of themselves. (Photo by Carly Henry/Cronkite News)

Samuel MacDonald takes a portrait of William Decker for The Photo Project. MacDonald started taking photos of André House guests in 2015. (Photo by Carly Henry/Cronkite News)

Many homes in Villa Esperanza have been reconstructed with wood. If another hurricane comes, these wooden homes could be destroyed. (Photo by Carly Henry/Cronkite Borderlands Project)

Jorge Olivo looks out at the Villa Esperanza neighborhood from the foundation of the home he is building, March 4, 2018. Carly Henry/Cronkite Borderlands Initiative

During Hurricane Maria, Villa Esperanza community leader Jorge Olivo spent 10 hours hunkered down at a stadium with four other residents who did not want to evacuate. “I wasn’t going to let anything happen to them,” Olivo said. Carly Henry/Cronkite Borderlands Project

Olivo remembers waiting out the hurricane from inside a concrete stadium in the Villa Esperanza neighborhood of Toa Alta, Puerto Rico. Carly Henry/Cronkite Borderlands Project

Angel Landin, an install helper at George Brazil, takes out an attic AC unit. Attic temperatures are often higher than outdoor temperatures. July 24, 2018. Carly Henry/The Arizona Republic.