Publication Date
In 2025 | 1 |
Since 2024 | 15 |
Since 2021 (last 5 years) | 23 |
Since 2016 (last 10 years) | 43 |
Since 2006 (last 20 years) | 126 |
Descriptor
Federal Indian Relationship | 1067 |
American Indians | 713 |
American Indian Education | 526 |
Tribes | 387 |
American Indian History | 320 |
Elementary Secondary Education | 302 |
Tribal Sovereignty | 296 |
Federal Legislation | 254 |
American Indian Reservations | 242 |
American Indian Culture | 235 |
Self Determination | 177 |
More ▼ |
Source
Author
Publication Type
Education Level
Audience
Practitioners | 66 |
Teachers | 57 |
Policymakers | 43 |
Students | 25 |
Community | 11 |
Researchers | 9 |
Administrators | 7 |
Counselors | 2 |
Parents | 2 |
Support Staff | 1 |
Location
Canada | 93 |
Arizona | 27 |
United States | 25 |
Oklahoma | 19 |
California | 18 |
New Mexico | 17 |
Washington | 16 |
Montana | 15 |
South Dakota | 15 |
Alaska | 14 |
Oregon | 13 |
More ▼ |
Laws, Policies, & Programs
Assessments and Surveys
National Assessment of… | 1 |
Praxis Series | 1 |
What Works Clearinghouse Rating
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
Lee, Lloyd L. – Online Submission, 2011
This paper discusses ways Dine peoples can use cultural knowledge to rebuild and decolonize the Navajo Nation. In the past, leaders, warriors, and all peoples worked together to sustain their community's way of life. These stories and strategies can be helpful in rectifying and resolving many challenges and problems Dine peoples face in the…
Descriptors: Navajo, Navajo (Nation), American Indian Education, Cultural Awareness
Washington, Elizabeth Yeager; van Hover, Stephanie – Social Studies, 2011
The Navajo Nation, comprising the largest land area allocated mainly to a Native American jurisdiction in the United States, offers a unique opportunity to enhance students' understandings of citizenship rights and sovereignty. For example, what does sovereignty mean on the reservation? What is the relationship between the Navajo Nation and the…
Descriptors: Citizenship, Navajo (Nation), Governmental Structure, Court Litigation
Miller, Bruce Granville – American Indian Culture and Research Journal, 2012
The many Coast Salish groups distributed on both sides of the United States-Canada border on the Pacific coast today face significant obstacles to cross the international border, and in some cases are denied passage or intimidated into not attempting to cross. The current situation regarding travel by Aboriginal people reflects the…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Canada Natives, Barriers, Mobility
Bolea, Patricia S. – Journal of Teaching in Social Work, 2012
This paper articulates a curricular approach that centers on a Native American service learning course. Social work students engaged in cross-cultural immersion on a reservation in the United States. By examination of historical United States policy impacting Indian tribes and contemporary experiences that challenge basic instruction in public…
Descriptors: Learning Theories, Social Problems, American Indians, Transformative Learning
Warner, Linda Sue; Grint, Keith – International Journal of Qualitative Studies in Education (QSE), 2012
The presumption of American's noble savage provides the foundation for the creation of one of the world's most recognizable stereotypes--the American Indian. The stereotype, lodged in the minds of most Americans as the Plains Indian warrior, contributed to decades of misunderstanding about leadership in traditional American Indian societies and…
Descriptors: Governance, Leadership Styles, Leadership, Tribes
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
Houser, Teresa M. – Great Plains Quarterly, 2011
Franklin Delano Roosevelt's election to the presidency in 1932 signaled a mandate for sweeping reform at the federal level to lift the nation out of the economic turbulence of the Great Depression. Under Commissioner of Indian Affairs John Collier, the Bureau of Indian Affairs (BIA) joined other agencies in launching policies to rebuild economic…
Descriptors: American Indians, Rural Areas, Federal Indian Relationship, American Indian History
Cole, Daniel – College Composition and Communication, 2011
This essay describes my design and implementation of a composition course focused on the Native American rhetorical device of survivance at work in debates on Indian removal and U.S.-Indian relations in general. Using a contact zone approach, I found that the course improved writing and thinking skills by pushing students out of their ideological…
Descriptors: Rhetoric, American Indians, Writing (Composition), Writing Instruction
Matsui, Kenichi – American Indian Culture and Research Journal, 2011
As of December 2010, the US Congress had enacted more than twenty major community-specific Native water-rights settlements, and the state of Arizona had more of these settlements (eight) than any other US state. This unique situation has invited voluminous studies on Arizona's Native water-rights settlements. Although these studies have clarified…
Descriptors: Water, American Indians, Federal Government, United States History
Black, Jason Edward – American Indian Culture and Research Journal, 2012
This essay--a combination of authorial narrative and scholarly critique--examines a grassroots organization's (Friends of Historic Northport) campaign to preserve a site in west Alabama where a pivotal Choctaw-Upper Creek battle took place in 1785. The organization has faced opposition from city planners and business leaders intent on developing…
Descriptors: Activism, Social Action, Citizen Participation, Historic Sites
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