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Kubasko Sullivan, Danielle; Fahrenbruck, Mary L. – Community Literacy Journal, 2021
Events following a display of archival photographs depicting a Navajo Civil Rights march that was sponsored by One Book/One Community of San Juan College illuminated racial tensions and competing injustices in the community of Farmington, New Mexico. These events are analyzed through a paradigm, indigenous-sustaining literacy, which could benefit…
Descriptors: Social Justice, Land Settlement, Archives, Photography
Katherine Hartmann – Journal of Extension, 2023
Extension is not equitably serving Indigenous communities due to the effects of colonization in the Land Grant System, a lack of funding, and a lack of understanding of the needs of Indigenous communities. The concept of food sovereignty offers a way to create meaningful educational programming and, despite the inequitable access to services,…
Descriptors: Extension Education, Indigenous Populations, Barriers, Indigenous Knowledge
Gallegos, Bernardo P. – American Educational History Journal, 2016
Indigenous slavery was a critical aspect of New Mexican life and culture during the Spanish, Mexican, and early American (Territorial) periods. Aside from the labor and military support provided by indigenous slaves for the expansion of the province, the genetic contribution to the population growth was enormous. Ramón Gutiérrez (1991) speculates…
Descriptors: Slavery, Informal Education, Indigenous Populations, Genetics
Nelson, Christine A.; Youngbull, Natalie R. – in education, 2015
The article explores the experiences of 13 undergraduate American Indian college students who served as mentors through a service-learning course while attending a 4-year, predominantly White institution (PWI). This chapter elucidates how serving as a mentor allowed participants to draw on three culturally relevant persistence factors in higher…
Descriptors: Indigenous Knowledge, Service Learning, Indigenous Populations, American Indian Students
Simpson, Thomas K. – La Confluencia, 1978
First in a three-part series of case studies tracing the impact of the "Anglo Revolution" on New Mexico, this article deals with copper mining in New Mexico, particularly the Santa Rita del Cobre copper mine. (NQ)
Descriptors: Anglo Americans, Economic Development, Industrialization, Land Settlement

Knowlton, Clark S. – Journal of Mexican American Studies, 1971
Descriptors: Civil Disobedience, History, Land Settlement, Land Use
Haltom, John F.; Singleton, James F. – 1972
A case study of social change, this paper describes the community of Tortugas, an American Indian-Mexican village at the southern edge of Las Cruces, New Mexico. The Indian inhabitants of the community have been assimilated into the rural Mexican American subculture, which has become increasingly suburban through a process little explored in the…
Descriptors: Acculturation, Community, History, Land Settlement
Simpson, Thomas K. – La Confluencia, 1979
Second in a 3-part series of case studies tracing the impact of the "Anglo revolution" on New Mexico, this article traces the effect of the "Anglo revolution" in the history of New Mexico's vast Maxwell Land Grant, which involves property ownership and property law. (Editor/NQ)
Descriptors: Anglo Americans, Conflict Resolution, Culture Conflict, Historical Reviews
Hall, Thomas D. – 1982
The varying results of incorporation on the survival of groups such as bands, tribes, chiefdoms and mercantile states can be explained by applying the historical process to the American conquest of the Southwest. The American Southwest (the region covered by Arizona, New Mexico, parts of Texas, California, Utah, Nevada, and Colorado) was occupied…
Descriptors: American Indians, Ecological Factors, Ethnic Relations, Hispanic Americans

Engstrand, Iris H. W. – OAH Magazine of History, 2000
Addresses whether or not the Spaniards were cruel by discussing such issues as the Spanish conquistadors of the 16th century, the presence of the Spaniards in New Mexico and California, the missionaries, and the Spanish naturalists of the late 18th century. Explains that some people protected and helped the Native Americans. (CMK)
Descriptors: American Indians, Foreign Countries, Land Settlement, Persuasive Discourse
Koman, Rita G. – 2002
Northern New Mexico boasts river valleys surrounded by snow covered mountains. But it is also harsh and unforgiving. One settler called it a "glorious hell." The "Hispanos," as the early Spanish settlers and their descendants were called, and the "Anglos," the immigrants from the east, were often in conflict. The…
Descriptors: Built Environment, Cultural Pluralism, Heritage Education, Historic Sites
Van Ness, John R. – 1973
A Spanish American village economy as influenced by changes in its land base, land rights, and the introduction of mercantile capitalism during the U.S. Territorial period in New Mexico was analyzed. Attention was given to differences in village land tenure and exploitative patterns from those imposed with the advent of Anglo American political…
Descriptors: Anglo Americans, Area Studies, Beliefs, Capitalism
Swadesh, Frances Leon; And Others – 1976
New Mexico, the fifth largest state, measures 390 miles from north to south and 350 miles from east to west. Six of the 7 life zones found in the U.S. are represented within the State's 77,866,240 acres. Its population has tended to congregate at altitudes of 7,000 feet and below, especially in areas where water is available. This booklet,…
Descriptors: American Indians, Area Studies, Biculturalism, Bilingual Education
Swadesh, Frances Leon; And Others – 1975
New Mexico was inhabited thousands of years ago. Each group of settlers saw the land in distinct ways. For some, its beauty consisted of its quality, the abundance of water, and the hope of a good harvest. For others, its beautiful sites were of more importance. Thus, each group established its own manner of living on the land and of using it.…
Descriptors: American Indians, Area Studies, Biculturalism, Bilingual Education

Zontek, Kenneth S. – Social Studies, 1996
Presents a teaching model that allows students to recognize, synthesize, and analyze characteristics and components of colonialism. Identifies and provides examples for five main types of colonial interaction: subjugation, coexistence, extermination, reservation, and combination. Applies this model to the case study of the Spanish in New Mexico.…
Descriptors: American Indian History, Colonialism, Conflict, Cultural Interrelationships
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