Indigenous Nation of Onegodia

Restoring Indigenous Governance

Building institutional structure, cultural continuity, and lawful governance for Indigenous peoples beginning in Connecticut and extending beyond.

Our Purpose

The Indigenous Nation of Onegodia (INO) works to establish lawful governance structures,
protect Indigenous cultural continuity, and build institutional frameworks capable of
serving Indigenous communities across the United States.

INO functions as a governance and organizational body dedicated to:

• cultural preservation
• Indigenous identity restoration
• lawful institutional development
• community coordination
• economic and technological capacity building

These initiatives are pursued through structured governance,
legal documentation, and long-term institutional planning.

Governance Framework

The institutional structure of the Indigenous Nation of Onegodia is organized through
formal governance documentation and legal classification systems.

The Onegodian Legal Code Number (OLCN) provides a structured framework
for organizing national governance acts, policies, and institutional development.

Sovereignty & Governance

OLCN 1000 Series establishes governance structures including the Constitution,
sovereignty policy, and institutional authority.

Economic Development

OLCN 2000 Series governs financial sovereignty, digital finance systems,
and economic development initiatives.

Digital Sovereignty

OLCN 3000 Series focuses on cybersecurity, digital governance,
and protection of Indigenous digital infrastructure.

Indigenous Nations Network

The Indigenous Nations Network is a developing platform designed to allow
tribal nations to establish their own digital presence and institutional infrastructure.

Each participating nation may receive:

• a dedicated landing page
• a subdomain
• governance and archival infrastructure
• cultural documentation space

Example structure:

quinnitukqut.indigenousnations.org

This network is intended to support Indigenous coordination
while allowing each nation to maintain its own autonomy.

Land & Cultural Stewardship

Research and documentation of Indigenous place names,
rivers, and cultural sites across Connecticut and surrounding regions.

Institutional Infrastructure

Development of governance systems, public records,
membership structures, and legal documentation.

Digital Sovereignty

Building secure digital infrastructure
for Indigenous governance, communication,
and cultural documentation.

Public Notices

Important announcements, institutional statements,
and governance updates are published through the INO Public Notices system.

Work With Us

The Indigenous Nation of Onegodia welcomes dialogue with tribal nations,
institutions, researchers, and community leaders interested in building
responsible Indigenous governance and cultural preservation initiatives.

Start typing and press Enter to search

Shopping Cart

No products in the cart.