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  2. How Land Reshuffling Made the American West’s Racial Divide

    www.aol.com/land-reshuffling-made-american-west...

    The U.S. government prohibited tribal self-governance on the reservation and installed the paternalistic Bureau of Indian Affairs to conduct reservation governance and manage tribal affairs for ...

  3. Dawes Act - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dawes_Act

    The new policy intended to concentrate Native Americans in areas away from the new settlers. During the later nineteenth century, Native American tribes resisted the imposition of the reservation system and engaged with the United States Army (in what were called the Indian Wars in the West) for decades.

  4. Native American reservation politics - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Native_American...

    In her book Living Through the Generations: Continuity and Change in Navajo Women's Lives, Joanna McCloskey addresses a growing desire to receive a further education among her Native youth. "Younger generations recognize the necessity of further training and education to compete in the labor force, and high school graduation remains symbolic of ...

  5. Outline of United States federal Indian law and policy

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Outline_of_United_States...

    Susette LaFlesche Tibbles (Omaha-Ponca-Iowa), author and international lecturer about Native American rights and reservation conditions. Thomas Tibbles , journalist and author from Omaha, Nebraska, who became an activist for Native American rights in the United States during the late 19th century and married Susette LaFlesche Tibbles.

  6. Native Americans and reservation inequality - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Native_Americans_and...

    Native American reservation inequality underlies a range of societal issues that affect the lives of Native American populations residing on reservations in the United States. About one third of the Native American population, about 700,000 people, lives on an Indian Reservation in the United States. [ 1 ]

  7. Indian Reserve (1763) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Indian_Reserve_(1763)

    The rest of the expanded British territory was left to Native Americans. The delineation of the Eastern Divide, following the Allegheny Ridge of the Appalachians, confirmed the limit to British settlement established at the 1758 Treaty of Easton, before Pontiac's War. Additionally, all European settlers in the territory (who were mostly French ...

  8. Indian Appropriations Act - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Indian_Appropriations_Act

    The Indian Appropriations Act is the name of several acts passed by the United States Congress.A considerable number of acts were passed under the same name throughout the 19th and early 20th centuries, but the most notable landmark acts consist of the Appropriation Bill for Indian Affairs of 1851 [1] and the 1871 Indian Appropriations Act.

  9. Land Ordinance of 1785 - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Land_Ordinance_of_1785

    The system did not protect people from competing claims or set up an orderly chain of title. The process was called 'indiscriminate location". This system encouraged individuals to amass large plantations instead of settling into dense communal development. This system was supported by the use of slave labor. [30]