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Leola Tsinnajinnie Paquin – Sage Research Methods Cases, 2024
This case study reflects upon practices of community-engaged scholarship and teaching as autoethnography research rooted in Indigenous educational sovereignty and decolonization. In this case study, readers are invited to contemplate how their positionalities, and practices in their respective fields, could be framed into active research. Readers…
Descriptors: American Indian Education, Tribal Sovereignty, Decolonization, Ethnography
Grandmother Cedar as Educator: Teacher Learning through Native Knowledges and Sovereignty Curriculum
Jenni Conrad; Dawn Hardison-Stevens – American Educational Research Journal, 2024
As Indigenous-led education mandates proliferate globally, understanding how educators teach Indigenous perspectives and sovereignty remains urgent. Learning and integrating such knowledge proves difficult for non-Native teachers, given their lengthy participation in settler colonial schooling and society. What does learning to implement Native…
Descriptors: Teacher Education, Indigenous Knowledge, Tribal Sovereignty, Decolonization
Tachine, Amanda R. – Teachers College Press, 2022
What is at stake when our young people attempt to belong to a college environment that reflects a world that does not want them for who they are? In this compelling book, Navajo scholar Amanda Tachine takes a personal look at 10 Navajo teenagers, following their experiences during their last year in high school and into their first year in…
Descriptors: Indigenous Populations, Indigenous Knowledge, Tribal Sovereignty, High School Seniors
Díaz Ríos, Claudia; Dion, Michelle L.; Leonard, Kelsey – Studies in Higher Education, 2020
The institutional logics of Western academic research often conflict with the epistemologies and goals of Indigenous peoples. Research sovereignty is a right but still an aspiration for many Indigenous peoples. National funding agencies and Western universities have sought to resolve these conflicts through various institutional and organizational…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Educational Research, Indigenous Populations, Tribal Sovereignty
Kapena Alapai; Sage Callen; Innocent Ekejiuba; Christopher M. Shrum; Brandon Stephens; Kristin Dwan; Adam Kaderabek; Debbie Krugipudi; Dave Roe; Nayonika Chatterjee; Lisa Hechtman; Emily Plagman-Frank; Sarah Glass, Contributor; Heather Grande, Contributor; Jennifer Himmelreich, Contributor – Institute of Museum and Library Services, 2024
This report evaluates the Institute of Museum and Library Services' (IMLS) four grant programs specifically designed to support library and museum services in Native American, Alaska Native, and Native Hawaiian (Kanaka Maoli) communities. Conducted by a combination of Kituwah Services, LLC (Kituwah Services), ICF, and IMLS, the evaluation examined…
Descriptors: Grants, Library Services, Museums, American Indians
Sara F. Waters; Meenakshi Richardson; Sara R. Mills; Alvina Marris; Fawn Harris; Myra Parker – Child Development, 2024
Healthy Indigenous child development is grounded in Indigenous ways of knowing and being. Attachment theory has been influential in understanding the significance of parenting for infant development in Western science but has focused on child-caregiver bonds predominantly within the parent-child dyad. To bring forth Indigenous perspectives…
Descriptors: Caregiver Child Relationship, Tribal Sovereignty, Attachment Behavior, Indigenous Populations
Hana E. Brown – RSF: The Russell Sage Foundation Journal of the Social Sciences, 2023
The Indian Child Welfare Act of 1978 (ICWA) sought to end the forced removal of Native children from their tribes. Decades later, American Indian children are still placed in foster and adoptive care at disproportionately high rates. Drawing on forty years of archival data, this study examines the role of administrative burden in reproducing these…
Descriptors: Child Welfare, American Indians, Federal Legislation, Data Analysis
Hammar, Roberth Kurniawan Ruslak – Journal of Social Studies Education Research, 2018
The protection and recognition of customary rights of Customary Law Community is a constitutional imperative according to the implementation of Article 18B of the 1945 Constitution. In order to minimize the conflict between government, employers and the community, it is necessary to understand the characteristics of customary rights of each tribe…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Civil Rights, Indigenous Populations, Community
Calderon, Dolores; Lees, Anna; Swan Waite, Renée; Wilson, Cynthia – Professional Development in Education, 2021
We propose that the Indigenizing framework of land education in teacher professional development offers an opportunity to engage the epistemological constraints of white settler teachers. Building off the work of teacher education researchers who examine settler epistemic formations in teachers and document the gaps between euroamerican epistemic…
Descriptors: Faculty Development, Indigenous Knowledge, Tribal Sovereignty, Place Based Education
Ahmed Al-Asfour; Oliver Crocco; Sandra White Shield – Higher Education Quarterly, 2024
The purpose of this study is to investigate the essential experiences and skills required for successful and effective leadership at Tribal Colleges and Universities (TCUs) in the United States. Utilizing Weick's seven properties of sensemaking as a framework, this study examines how participants developed their sensemaking abilities regarding…
Descriptors: Tribally Controlled Education, Tribes, Tribal Sovereignty, Minority Serving Institutions
2023 Tribal Leaders Study: An Emergent View on Education, Tribal Sovereignty, Leadership, and Change
William T. Holmes – Educational Research: Theory and Practice, 2024
The 2023 Tribal Leaders qualitative study is an emergent perspective from twelve Tribal leaders on education, Tribal sovereignty, leadership, and change presented as a poster session at the 2023 NRMERA conference in Omaha, Nebraska. This conceptual paper presents a review of literature acknowledging a lack of research inclusive of the voice of…
Descriptors: Tribal Sovereignty, American Indians, Tribally Controlled Education, Tribes
K. Tsianina Lomawaima; Teresa L. McCarty – Teachers College Press, 2024
"To Remain an Indian" traces the footprints of Indigenous education in what is now the United States. Native Peoples' educational systems are rooted in ways of knowing and being that have endured for millennia, despite the imposition of colonial schooling. In this second edition, the authors amplify their theoretical framework of settler…
Descriptors: Democracy, American Indian Education, Tribal Sovereignty, Tribally Controlled Education
Emmons, Nichlas – i.e.: inquiry in education, 2020
This paper explores the process of developing a continuing education program for tribal land professionals working in tribal land offices across the United States. Born from discussions surrounding the need to professionalize careers in tribal land offices, the National Tribal Land Association developed a certification program for land office…
Descriptors: Program Development, Professional Continuing Education, Reservation American Indians, American Indian Education
Davies, Daniel – Diaspora, Indigenous, and Minority Education, 2022
The years following the end of martial law and the democratization of Taiwan have been marked by sizable political and social reform. In the interests of increasing social participation and decreasing direct state control of economic and social development programs, public-private partnerships (PPP) have been emphasized as the primary means to…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Educational Change, Indigenous Knowledge, Elementary Schools
Vincent Werito – Journal of Language, Identity, and Education, 2025
This article addresses critical issues of how Indigenous (Diné/Navajo) youth construct meaning of their racial, cultural, and linguistic identities within the historical, political, and socio-cultural contexts of the United States of America as a racialized, settler/colonial society. Using Tribal Crit theory, the author, a member of the Diné…
Descriptors: Navajo (Nation), Indigenous Populations, American Indian Students, American Indian Culture