NotesFAQContact Us
Collection
Advanced
Search Tips
Showing all 8 results Save | Export
American Indian Journal, 1978
Reviewing Indian land claims and their impact on anti-Indian groups, states, Indian Claims Commission, and the federal government, this article reviews the Maine land claim, Taos Blue Lake, and the Submarginal Lands Act of 1933. (RTS)
Descriptors: American Indians, Court Litigation, Federal Legislation, Land Settlement
Richardson, Allan S. – American Indian Journal, 1979
Homesteading required abandoning tribal relations, and so the Nooksack, a consistently recognized tribe from the 1850s to the 1880s, became a federally nonrecognized tribe. (Author)
Descriptors: American Indians, Culture Conflict, Group Dynamics, History
Lewis, Norman – American Indian Journal, 1978
Describing Bolivia's interest in encouraging Caucasian immigrants from South Africa, for purposes of settling and developing traditionally Indian lands, this article details the miserable conditions of slavery and cultural/physical genocide currently operative in Bolivia. (JC)
Descriptors: American Indians, Genocide, Government (Administrative Body), Immigrants
Tallchief, A. – American Indian Journal, 1980
The article analyzes the proposed Maine Settlement. It also looks at a viable alternative to the settlement based on the premise that Indian tribes can survive only as nations, not as state municipalities or United States landowners. (Author/SB)
Descriptors: American Indians, Economic Opportunities, Federal Indian Relationship, Land Settlement
Greene, Bruce – American Indian Journal, 1979
The Supreme Court joins a U.S. District Court to deliver two decisions regarding treaty right fishing which are vitally important to the law of federal-Indian treaty rights. This essay explains the nature of those cases, the matters at issue in them, and their relationship to each other. (NQ)
Descriptors: American Indians, Civil Rights, Court Litigation, Federal Indian Relationship
Gover, Kevin – American Indian Journal, 1977
Oklahoma is a microcosm of American Indian country. Water rights, tribal government impotence, jurisdiction, tribal membership, treaty rights, taxation, sovereignty, racism, and poor housing, education, and health are all vital issues facing the Indian tribes of Oklahoma. In order to understand the complexity of these issues, a review of the…
Descriptors: American Indian Reservations, American Indians, Culture Conflict, Government Role
Sanders, Douglas – American Indian Journal, 1980
Stressing the importance of comparing the experiences of indigeneous people throughout the world, this article reviews history of British aboriginal relations in New Zealand and Australia, thus shedding a new perspective on Indian affairs in North America. (Author/ DS)
Descriptors: Comparative Analysis, Federal Legislation, Government Role, Land Settlement
Kammer, Jerry – American Indian Journal, 1979
The paper outlines the history of the long-standing dispute over land in Arizona co-owned by the Navajo and Hopi. It details the confusing history and predicted effects of related governmental action and legislation and describes the position of important personalities on all sides of the issue. (SB)
Descriptors: American Indian Reservations, American Indians, Cultural Background, Cultural Differences