NotesFAQContact Us
Collection
Advanced
Search Tips
Showing all 13 results Save | Export
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
Direct linkDirect link
Cuthbert, Denise; Quartly, Marian – American Indian Quarterly, 2013
Inquiries into the removal and mistreatment of Indigenous and non-Indigenous children, national regret, and national apologies constitute a congested political landscape in contemporary Australia. Within two years, two formal apologies were delivered by the prime minister, Kevin Rudd, to individuals who had suffered forced removal from family and…
Descriptors: Indigenous Populations, Foreign Countries, Children, Child Abuse
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
Direct linkDirect link
Swain, Shurlee – American Indian Quarterly, 2013
In 1838 a child known as Mathinna was removed from the settlement for the remnant of the Tasmanian Aboriginal people on Flinders Island and taken to Hobart to live in the house of the lieutenant governor. Sir John and Lady Franklin, the historical record recounts, were impressed by her intelligence and wanted to bring her up as a companion to…
Descriptors: Indigenous Populations, Foreign Countries, Adoption, Children
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
Direct linkDirect link
Barker, Adam J. – American Indian Quarterly, 2009
The author's fundamental contention is this: Canadian society remains driven by the logic of imperialism and engages in concerted colonial action against Indigenous peoples whose claims to land and self-determination continue to undermine the legitimacy of Canadian authority and hegemony. The imperial ambitions of the Canadian state and its…
Descriptors: Land Settlement, Indigenous Populations, Power Structure, Government Role
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
Direct linkDirect link
Sneider, Leah – American Indian Quarterly, 2012
Arming themselves with "manifest destiny" rhetoric, which claimed divine Anglo-Saxon superiority as justification for the conquest of Indigenous and Mexican peoples and the land they occupied, white settlers forcefully pushed into California territory. The two-year-long Mexican-American War resulted in the acquisition of the present-day…
Descriptors: United States History, Tribes, Autobiographies, American Indians
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
Direct linkDirect link
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
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
Direct linkDirect link
Ackley, Kristina – American Indian Quarterly, 2009
The Oneidas have a history marked by land dispossession and removal from a once vast homeland. In 2009, there are three Oneida communities that share in litigation for the return of the homeland; in New York (2,000 members), at the Thames community near Southwold, Ontario (5,000 members), and in Wisconsin (15,000 members). Those hostile to the…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, American Indians, Self Concept, Land Settlement
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
Direct linkDirect link
Hill, Susan M. – American Indian Quarterly, 2009
As a historian the author expects that most people will not find her research very exciting. She is used to working in a comfortable obscurity that piques the interest of a few but does not draw the gaze of many. But for the last three years that has not been the case. In February 2006 a small group of people from her community of Ohswe:ken (Six…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Doctoral Dissertations, Land Settlement, Time Perspective
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
Direct linkDirect link
Aikau, Hokulani K. – American Indian Quarterly, 2008
Kanaka Maoli are under constant threat of becoming exiles in their homeland. With the steady encroachment of development such as new luxury subdivisions on Moloka'i, high-rise condominiums in Waikiki, and new multi-million-dollar homes on the beaches of all the major islands, they are being pushed off their land and replaced by new wealthy…
Descriptors: Salaries, Indigenous Populations, Hawaiians, Economic Development
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
Cave, Alfred E. – American Indian Quarterly, 1988
Reviews sixteenth-and seventeenth-century writings by Rastell, More, Eden, Hakluyt, Peckham, Gray, Symonds, Johnson, Strachey, Purchas, Winthrop, and Cotton justifying English occupation of Indian lands through the Biblical Canaan analogy and the secular "vacant land" (vacuum domicilium) principle. Notes dissent by Crashaw, Williams, and…
Descriptors: American Indian History, American Indians, Colonial History (United States), Culture Conflict
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
Direct linkDirect link
Gareau, Marcelle Marie – American Indian Quarterly, 2003
In this essay, the author provides a word of caution to those in the social sciences where, in the name of "objective science," it becomes easy to render humans into objects. Anthropology, one of the social sciences, has often been referred to as a tool of colonization. The discipline's approach of seeing small communities as…
Descriptors: Research Methodology, Land Settlement, Anthropology, Social Structure
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
Vizenor, Gerald – American Indian Quarterly, 1989
Brings together past and present aspects of Chippewa tribal experience at White Earth Reservation. Discusses: (1) land allotment and subsequent Congressional investigations; (2) treaties; (3) high-stakes bingo as economic windfall and test of tribal sovereignty; (4) educational experiences in federal boarding schools; and (5) religion,…
Descriptors: American Indian Education, American Indian History, American Indian Reservations, Educational Experience
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
Direct linkDirect link
Smith, Claire; Jackson, Gary – American Indian Quarterly, 2006
In this article the authors discuss recent developments in the decolonization of Australian archaeology. From the viewpoint of Indigenous Australians, much archaeological and anthropological research has been nothing more than a tool of colonial exploitation. For the last twenty years, many have argued for greater control over research and for a…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Intellectual Property, Archaeology, Indigenous Populations
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
Conte, Christine – American Indian Quarterly, 1982
Explores the role of Navajo women in a remote area of the western reservation in the processes of production, consumption, and distribution of resources. Emphasis is placed on the way women selectively activate kin ties in order to perform tasks, obtain resources, and accumulate wealth. (Author)
Descriptors: Agricultural Production, American Indian Culture, Extended Family, Family Structure