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Heimer, Lucinda G.; Caya, Lynell; Lancaster, Paige; Saxon, Lauren; Wildman, Courtney – Global Education Review, 2019
This case study of undergraduate early childhood education pre-service teachers in an international field experience examines living, working, and studying in a sovereign nation while still "at home" within the United States. In our various roles (researcher, pre-service teacher, faculty mentor), we explored the impact of colonization as…
Descriptors: Case Studies, Undergraduate Students, Preservice Teachers, Early Childhood Education
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Allison, James R., III – Great Plains Quarterly, 2012
Eighty-six Cheyenne families followed Little Wolf to his self-imposed exile near Rosebud Creek. To most observers, this blind loyalty to a fallen leader required little explanation. After all, Little Wolf had recently led his people in a costly yet courageous escape from Indian Territory, fighting through the dead of winter back to the Northern…
Descriptors: American Indian History, American Indian Reservations, American Indians, Tribal Sovereignty
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Wall, Stephen – Tribal College Journal of American Indian Higher Education, 2015
The relationship between American Indians and the U.S. federal government and state governments is complicated. It is a relationship that controls almost all aspects of tribal life and has resulted in American Indians being the most legislated people in the United States. For many years tribal people relied on non-Native attorneys to help navigate…
Descriptors: Law Related Education, Legal Education (Professions), American Indian Education, Culturally Relevant Education
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Fallon, Gerald; Paquette, Jerald – Canadian Journal of Educational Administration and Policy, 2012
This paper reviews the meaning and content of various First-Nation self-government discourses that have emerged over the last 40 years. Based on a detailed thematic analysis of policy papers, reports, and self-governance agreements on this issue of First-Nations control of education, this paper presents a coherent and defensible understanding of…
Descriptors: Criticism, Foreign Countries, Canada Natives, Governance
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McCarty, Teresa L.; Lee, Tiffany S. – Harvard Educational Review, 2014
In this article, Teresa L. McCarty and Tiffany S. Lee present critical culturally sustaining/revitalizing pedagogy as a necessary concept to understand and guide educational practices for Native American learners. Premising their discussion on the fundamental role of tribal sovereignty in Native American schooling, the authors underscore and…
Descriptors: American Indian Culture, Tribal Sovereignty, Role, American Indian Education
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Crocket, Alastair – British Journal of Guidance & Counselling, 2012
This article examines the discursive production of counsellor identity and practice through the operations of colonising and postcolonial discourse in Aotearoa New Zealand. It argues that constructs of cultural safety, tino rangatiratanga and Maori sovereignty, which arose as part of the postcolonial politics of life in Aotearoa, have achieved…
Descriptors: Safety, Cultural Maintenance, Foreign Countries, Racial Bias
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Ackerman, William V.; Bunch, Rick L. – American Indian Quarterly, 2012
Previous research on Indian gaming in South Dakota discovered very restrictive and unfavorable tribal-state compacts that appear to border on economic racism. This article expands this previous research by exploring the influence of tribal-state Indian gaming compacts for the Indian casinos located in the contiguous United States. The purpose is…
Descriptors: Tribal Sovereignty, American Indian Reservations, Industry, Games
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Stark, Heidi Kiiwetinepinesiik – American Indian Quarterly, 2012
The story, known as "The Theft of Fire," illustrates numerous meanings and teachings crucial to understanding Anishinaabe nationhood. This story contains two discernible points. First, it reveals how the Anishinaabe obtained fire. The second discernible feature within this story is the marking of the hare by his theft of fire. Stories…
Descriptors: American Indians, Tribes, Treaties, American Indian History
Shailesh Shukla; Brielle Beaudin; Jason Dyck; Carol Cochrane; Jazmin Alfaro; Janna Barkman; Cindy Hart – Sage Research Methods Cases, 2014
A team of four students and one faculty member from the University of Winnipeg, as well as two community representatives, undertook a collaborative action-research project in Fisher River Cree Nation, Manitoba, Canada, to explore Indigenous knowledges associated with cultivation, production, and consumption practices of traditional foods and…
Descriptors: Action Research, Community Involvement, Interviews, Oral History
North Dakota Department of Public Instruction, 2015
In the spring of 2015, the North Dakota Department of Public Instruction brought together tribal Elders from across North Dakota to share stories, memories, songs, and wisdom in order to develop the North Dakota Native American Essential Understandings (NDNAEU) to guide the learning of both Native and non-Native students across the state. They…
Descriptors: American Indians, Indigenous Knowledge, American Indian Culture, Public Education
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Wolfe, Patrick – American Indian Culture and Research Journal, 2012
The road of US Indian law and policy, like its companion to hell, is paved with good intentions. Critics of its generally diabolic outcomes have had little difficulty demonstrating the moral chasm between the appealing rhetoric in which a policy or judgment was framed and the oppressive consequences to which it practically conduced. With a nod to…
Descriptors: Rhetoric, American Indians, Court Litigation, American Indian History
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Colombi, Benedict J. – American Indian Quarterly, 2012
Change due to natural disturbances and disasters, population growth and decline, economic crises, and environmental and climate change creates significant cultural challenges. Rapid change and the transformation it brings also involve complex relationships between sovereign tribes, resources, and the global system. This article explores how salmon…
Descriptors: Coping, Change, Adjustment (to Environment), American Indian Culture
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Denson, Andrew – American Indian Culture and Research Journal, 2012
This essay examines the depiction of Native Americans by the US Information Agency (USIA), the bureau charged with explaining American politics to the international public during the Cold War. In the 1950s and 1960s, the USIA broadcast the message that Americans had begun to acknowledge their nation's history of conquest and were working to…
Descriptors: United States History, Civil Rights, American Indians, Politics
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Bordeaux, Lionel – Tribal College Journal of American Indian Higher Education, 2012
In this article, the author, who is the long-serving president of Sinte Gleska University, recalls his journey to the presidency and shares his hopes for the future. He stresses that educators nowadays are again challenged to redefine and restructure education at tribal colleges and within their elementary and secondary schools. These institutions…
Descriptors: Secondary Schools, Tribally Controlled Education, College Presidents, Futures (of Society)
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Morris, Kate – American Indian Quarterly, 2011
In this article the author is concerned with the intersection of two congruent phenomena: (1) an increasing number of references to borders in contemporary Native American art; and (2) an increasing occurrence of border-rights conflicts between Native nations and the governments of the United States and Canada. Focusing on the period roughly 1990…
Descriptors: American Indians, Foreign Countries, Art, Conflict
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