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Bowman, Colleen Wilma – ProQuest LLC, 2013
The purpose of this qualitative study was to determine the definition of student success as defined by the Navajo people. The data collection method used was the focus group. The data were collected from two geographical settings from two public schools located within the boundaries of the Navajo Indian Reservation. The focus group participants…
Descriptors: Navajo (Nation), American Indian Students, Success, Academic Achievement
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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
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Black, Jason Edward – Quarterly Journal of Speech, 2009
This essay examines nineteenth-century Native resistance to the American Indian removal policy as a strategy of decolonization. Attention focuses in particular on the tactics of decolonization employed in the rhetoric of the Choctaw, Chickasaw, Creek, and Seminole nations as it functioned to expose the dilemmas and hypocrisies of U.S. government…
Descriptors: Rhetoric, American Indians, American Indian History, Public Policy
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Chong, Jenny; Hassin, Jeanette; Young, Robert S.; Joe, Jennie R. – Evaluation Review, 2011
Two case studies are presented to compare and contrast the challenges encountered when attempting to conduct participatory evaluations (P-Es) with tribal programs that represented two extremes of collaboration between the programs and evaluators. In one case, the P-E was successful because the principals were invested in the program, whereas in…
Descriptors: American Indians, Substance Abuse, American Indian Reservations, Federal Programs
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Haake, Claudia B. – American Indian Culture and Research Journal, 2012
This article seeks to explain the nature of the arguments the Iroquois presented to the US government in trying to prevent their removal. In the letters they wrote to the federal government from the 1830s to the 1850s they emphasized their own law as well as that of the United States. They drew on whatever perception of law they deemed was best…
Descriptors: American Indian History, Federal Government, Federal Indian Relationship, Treaties
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Kroskrity, Paul V. – American Indian Culture and Research Journal, 2011
In this discussion of a set of studies that fits the trope of "Indian Languages in Unexpected Places," I explore the obvious necessity of developing a relevant notion of linguistic "leakage" following a famous image from the writings of the linguistic anthropologist Edward Sapir. Though in its original use, the concept applied more to the order of…
Descriptors: Language Dominance, Boarding Schools, Grammar, American Indians
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Puisto, Jaakko – American Indian Culture and Research Journal, 2009
The federal policy of termination against Native Americans was on a high roll from 1946 to 1954. The policy received explicit expression in House Concurrent Resolution 108, passed in 1953, which stated that "Indians should be made subject to the same laws and entitled to the same privileges and responsibilities as are applicable to other…
Descriptors: Civil Rights, American Indians, Historians, Tribes
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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
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Milholland, Sharon – American Indian Culture and Research Journal, 2010
In this article, the author raises a few examples of incompatible concepts and languages in US federal environmental and cultural laws affecting the management of indigenous sacred lands. She explains these examples by describing the management of a selection of Navajo (Dine) sacred places and elsewhere. Through fundamental concepts rooted in…
Descriptors: Fundamental Concepts, American Indians, Federal Legislation, Navajo (Nation)
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Cohen, Erik; Allen, Ann – Educational Policy, 2013
This article explores the impact of standardization policies of the No Child Left Behind Act (NCLB) of 2001 on the American Indian/Alaska Native community and the ability of educational policy to promote sovereignty, liberty and equity within indigenous communities. Examining current research and data generated from the National Indian Education…
Descriptors: Standards, Language Maintenance, Federal Indian Relationship, Educational Policy
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Jain, Samvit – History Teacher, 2009
This article discusses Chief Joseph's surrender that marked the beginning of his diplomatic stand for justice in Indian Territory, where his tribe was forcibly exiled in accordance with American Indian policy of the time. Joseph battled for the repatriation of the Nez Perce through protests and other legal means, winning the support of the growing…
Descriptors: American Indians, American Indian Education, Federal Indian Relationship, Civil Rights
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McCarthy, Theresa – American Indian Culture and Research Journal, 2010
Among the Haudenosaunee, the clan system is an ancient tradition of matrilineal descent that has maintained the social, political, economic, and spiritual cohesion of the people for centuries. Following the American Revolution and the relocation of large numbers of Haudenosaunee people from America's traditional homelands in what is now New York…
Descriptors: Citizenship, American Indian Languages, Foreign Countries, Leadership
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Palmer, Mark H. – American Indian Culture and Research Journal, 2012
The centering processes of geographic information system (GIS) development at the United States Bureau of Indian Affairs (BIA) was an extension of past cartographic encounters with American Indians through the central control of geospatial technologies, uneven development of geographic information resources, and extension of technically dependent…
Descriptors: Geographic Information Systems, United States History, American Indian History, American Indians
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Dejong, David H. – American Indian Culture and Research Journal, 2009
The Akimel O'odham, or "River People" (Pima), have lived in the middle Gila River Valley for centuries, irrigating and cultivating the same land as their Huhugam ancestors did for millennia. Continuing their irrigated agricultural economy bequeathed to them by their Huhugam ancestors, the Pima leveraged a favorable geopolitical setting into a…
Descriptors: Free Enterprise System, Political Attitudes, American Indian Culture, American Indians
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Steen-Adams, Michelle M.; Langston, Nancy E.; Mladenoff, David J. – American Indian Culture and Research Journal, 2010
The harvest of the Great Lakes primary forest stands (ca. 1860-1925) transformed the region's ecological, cultural, and political landscapes. Although logging affected both Indian and white communities, the Ojibwe experienced the lumber era in ways that differed from many of their white neighbors. When the 125,000-acre Bad River Reservation was…
Descriptors: Earth Science, Ecology, Tribes, Forestry
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