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Sorensen, Barbara – Winds of Change, 2001
Following hearings concerning inadequate telephone access on American Indian lands, the Federal Communications Commission (FCC) committed to promoting a government-to-government relationship with federally recognized tribes and consulting with them prior to implementing regulatory actions, and created financial assistance programs for telephone…
Descriptors: American Indians, Conferences, Federal Aid, Federal Indian Relationship
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Brown, Eddie F.; Limb, Gordon E.; Clifford, Chey A.; Munoz, Ric; Whitaker, Leslie Schueler – Child Welfare, 2004
Funding under Title IV-E has historically not been available to American Indian communities, therefore, tribes have had to develop agreements with states to access these funds for child care services. This study analyzes Title IV-E intergovernmental provisions to help tribes and states strengthen Title IV-E agreements. A nationwide content…
Descriptors: Tribes, Foster Care, American Indians, Child Welfare
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Breinig, Jeane – American Indian Quarterly, 2003
The author was hired in the 1995-1996 academic year at the University of Alaska-Anchorage (UAA) in the Department of English. Her position was funded as a direct hire--one of two Alaska Native professors hired as part of a diversity directive to increase the number of minority professors on campus, and more specifically Alaska Natives. Alaska…
Descriptors: Tenure, American Indians, Alaska Natives, Tribes
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Custred, Glynn – Academic Questions, 2005
Decency would suggest that people should be allowed to bury their own dead. But, with the help of a climate of racial intimidation, modern Indian tribes, backed by the federal government, asserted exclusive ownership of everything before Columbus. Glynn Custred remembers a stalwart anthropologist who cried foul and preserved the knowledge of our…
Descriptors: Tribes, Federal Government, Paleontology, Anthropology
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Acker, Thomas L.; Jones, Chian; Smith, Dean Howard – American Indian Culture and Research Journal, 2006
Energy in the form of electricity is a hot topic among tribes within the Western Regional Air Partnership (WRAP). For too many people, energy is too expensive, not reliable, or even nonexistent. For many tribal members, up to 20 or 30 percent of income is spent on energy, which is unbelievably high compared to nontribal people in the same area.…
Descriptors: Tribal Sovereignty, Tribes, Job Development, Integrity
Olsen, Ken – Teaching Tolerance, 2006
Writer and historian Bernard DeVoto observed more than 50 years ago that a dismaying amount of American history has been written without regards to the Indians. Such disregard is glaring in many mainstream stories of Meriwether Lewis and William Clark. Lewis and Clark began preparing for their historic journey in 1803 and officially launched the…
Descriptors: Tribes, United States History, Travel, American Indian History
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Skopek, Tracy A.; Engstrom, Rich; Hansen, Kenneth – American Indian Culture and Research Journal, 2005
In this article, the authors explore this new level of tribal political sophistication and how the tribes sought to pressure state legislators by pursuing a public relation campaign centered on issues of economic interest and sovereignty. Though they have been unsuccessful in recent legislative sessions, there is evidence of a growing…
Descriptors: Political Influences, Court Litigation, Public Relations, Legislators
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Shreve, Bradley Glenn – American Indian Culture and Research Journal, 2006
In the spring of 1977, members of the National Indian Youth Council (NIYC), along with the Coalition for Navajo Liberation, barraged the Secretary of the Interior and the chairman of the Navajo Nation with petitions calling for a halt to the proposed construction of several coal gasification plants on the Navajo Reservation in northwestern New…
Descriptors: Fuels, Navajo, Death, Navajo (Nation)
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Tierney, William G.; Sallee, Margaret W.; Venegas, Kristan M. – Journal of College Admission, 2007
American Indians are among the most underrepresented and underserved groups in higher education. Fifty-one out of every 100 American Indians graduate from high school. Of these 1, only 7 percent will enroll in college and ultimately earn a bachelor's degree within six years. Some American-Indian students fail to complete their studies for…
Descriptors: Student Employment, American Indians, Federal Aid, Scholarships
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Tetzloff, Lisa M. – American Educational History Journal, 2007
This article traces the history of Native American women clubs from 1899-1955. In its heyday in the early 1900s, the women's club movement attracted about two million participants nationwide. Excluded from higher education at the time, women were moved to create their own opportunities to learn, meeting regularly in small groups to study such…
Descriptors: Females, American Indians, Clubs, United States History
Spring, Joel – 1996
This book describes the impact of U.S. government social, cultural and educational policies on a Native American family and its tribe--the Choctaw--from 1763 to 1995. The book intertwines a personal quest for family roots in Choctaw tribal history with traditional historical methodology to examine the direct relationship between educational…
Descriptors: Acculturation, American Indian Education, American Indian History, Blacks
Administration for Children & Families, 2008
This document conveys mandatory policies that have their basis in Federal Law and/or program regulations. It also provides interpretations of Federal Statutes and program regulations initiated by inquiries from State Child Welfare agencies or Administration for Children and Families (ACF) Regional Offices. The manual replaces the Children's…
Descriptors: Independent Living, Federal Legislation, Child Welfare, Tribes
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Lowe, John – Journal of School Nursing, 2008
This pilot study tests the feasibility of using a Talking Circle approach and measures cultural values and beliefs within a HIV/AIDS and hepatitis C virus (HCV) prevention program conducted among a Native American (Cherokee) youth population. A descriptive correlation design was used to examine the relationship between Cherokee self-reliance and…
Descriptors: Prevention, Acquired Immunodeficiency Syndrome (AIDS), Communicable Diseases, American Indian Culture
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Carpenter, Ron – Studies in American Indian Literatures, 2007
In this essay, the author begins by acknowledging the necessity of teaching Native American and other indigenous literatures both alongside and independent of Western texts. Instructors should teach these works by listening to the Native authors' worldviews and literary traditions. However, when instructors try to teach Native literatures…
Descriptors: American Indian Literature, Cultural Context, Perspective Taking, Prior Learning
Congress of the U.S., Washington, DC. Senate Select Committee on Indian Affairs. – 1992
A Senate hearing received testimony on amendments to the Buy Indian Act, which allows the federal government to give preference to Indian businesses when awarding contracts on reservations. The legislation focuses on reservation economic development, sets aside for small businesses all contracts below $1 million, addresses the prompt payment…
Descriptors: American Indian Reservations, American Indians, Contracts, Economic Development
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