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Kiser, William S. – American Indian Quarterly, 2012
Navajo trading has been a crucial component of that tribe's localized economy for generations and has been the subject of much scholarship over the years. The role of the Navajo trader in influencing the types and styles of crafts that Navajos created as well as providing tribal members with an outlet for those items remains important to their…
Descriptors: Navajo (Nation), Handicrafts, American Indian Culture, Financial Services
Stark, Heidi Kiiwetinepinesiik – American Indian Quarterly, 2012
The story, known as "The Theft of Fire," illustrates numerous meanings and teachings crucial to understanding Anishinaabe nationhood. This story contains two discernible points. First, it reveals how the Anishinaabe obtained fire. The second discernible feature within this story is the marking of the hare by his theft of fire. Stories…
Descriptors: American Indians, Tribes, Treaties, American Indian History
Bess, Jennifer – American Indian Quarterly, 2013
Through his many works calling for the evolution of indigenous theory, Duane Champagne has emphasized the importance of recovering indigenous voices such as Chilocco Indian Industrial School graduate Mack Setima's and documenting forms of cultural continuity. According to Champagne, case studies such as K. Tsianina Lomawaima's scholarship on…
Descriptors: Organizational Change, American Indian Education, Boarding Schools, American Indian Culture
Stevenson, Allyson – American Indian Quarterly, 2013
The 1983 Review of the Family Services Act (1973) and the Advisory Council meetings in Saskatchewan should be viewed against the backdrop of political changes taking place in North American society. Beginning with decolonization movements in both Canada and the United States, control over the provision of child and family services to indigenous…
Descriptors: American Indians, Child Welfare, Gender Discrimination, North Americans
Morris, Kate – American Indian Quarterly, 2011
In this article the author is concerned with the intersection of two congruent phenomena: (1) an increasing number of references to borders in contemporary Native American art; and (2) an increasing occurrence of border-rights conflicts between Native nations and the governments of the United States and Canada. Focusing on the period roughly 1990…
Descriptors: American Indians, Foreign Countries, Art, Conflict
Krupat, Arnold – American Indian Quarterly, 2011
Indian orators have been saying good-bye for more than three hundred years. John Eliot's "Dying Speeches of Several Indians" (1685), as David Murray notes, inaugurates a long textual history in which "Indians... are most useful dying," or, as in a number of speeches, bidding the world farewell as they embrace an undesired but…
Descriptors: United States History, American Indians, Leaders, Speeches
Wiedman, Dennis – American Indian Quarterly, 2012
In the five hundred years of European and American globalization of the world, seldom have Indigenous peoples been invited to a constitutional convention and first legislature to express their perspectives and concerns. Rarely in the five-hundred-year history of the European and American colonization of the world were the rights of the Indigenous…
Descriptors: Freedom, Religion, Medicine, American Indians
Martinez, David – American Indian Quarterly, 2010
Members of the Pima, or Akimel O'odham, community, despite their experiment with a pre-1934 constitutional government, not to mention their conversion to Christianity and sending their children to school, have not generated writers and activists as did their tribal peers in other parts of the United States such as Oklahoma, the Upper Plains, and…
Descriptors: American Indians, Indigenous Knowledge, American Indian History, American Indian Culture
Wakeham, Pauline – American Indian Quarterly, 2012
If recent years have witnessed the rise of a worldwide phenomenon of reconciliation and apology, so also in the past few decades, and with increasing force since September 11, 2001, the global forum has seen the increased mediatization of spectacles of terror. The present moment is thus characterized by two seemingly contradictory rubrics: the…
Descriptors: Indigenous Populations, Racial Discrimination, Foreign Countries, Democracy
Schaap, James I. – American Indian Quarterly, 2010
This article presents a review which embodies a general inquiry about the growth of the Native American gaming industry and possibilities the future may hold for America's indigenous people. Tribal gaming is different from other forms of gaming. It is conducted by Native American governments as a way to carry out their natural self-governing…
Descriptors: Tourism, American Indians, Quality of Life, Tribes
Daly, Heather Ponchetti – American Indian Quarterly, 2009
In 1953 California Indians watched as the U.S. Congress passed House Concurrent Resolution 108 to effectively terminate federal trust protection of American Indian reservation lands. Included in the wording of the Termination Act is the following: It is the policy of Congress, as rapidly as possible, to make the Indian within the ... territorial…
Descriptors: Citizenship, American Indians, Tribes, Federal Legislation
Howey, Meghan C. L. – American Indian Quarterly, 2010
This article examines the ways American Indian authors, particularly three contemporary Anishinaabeg writers, engaged with the question of Native American origins during the racially polarized project of "imagining" the nation of the United States throughout the 19th century. In this article, the author argues that American Indian…
Descriptors: American Indian Culture, American Indians, Audiences, Foreign Countries
Doerfler, Jill – American Indian Quarterly, 2009
In this article the author uses tribalography as a methodology and connects multiple elements in a textual weaving that constructs an Anishinaabe tribalography. As an Anishinaabe tribalography, this work will follow in the tradition set forth by Gerald Vizenor and Gordon Henry, who, as Kimberly Blaeser asserts, "shift and reshift their…
Descriptors: American Indian History, American Indians, Tribes, Identification
Wojcik, Eva – American Indian Quarterly, 2008
Two hundred twenty five Hunkpapa Indians fled from the Grand River Camp on the Standing Rock Reservation to the Cheyenne River Reservation to council with Big Foot's band when Sitting Bull was killed on December 15, 1890. These Indian families did not contribute to the number of fatalities at Wounded Knee because they were being held by the U.S.…
Descriptors: Trust (Psychology), American Indians, Integrity, American Indian History
Wilkins, David E.; Lightfoot, Sheryl – American Indian Quarterly, 2008
No comprehensive analysis of tribal constitutions has ever been conducted, so this project aims to begin filling this significant gap in American, constitutional, and comparative politics research. In this study, the authors examine only one small but significant element of Native constitutions: oaths of office for incoming tribal government…
Descriptors: Tribes, Word Order, Employment Practices, Public Officials