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         Native American Issues:     more books (100)
  1. Native Americans: Current Issues
  2. Journal of the Modoc County Historical Society. No. 12 1990. Native American Issue. The Northern Piutes, Achumawi, The Modocs by Sarah, Editor Gooch, 1990-01-01
  3. Tamaqua Winter/Spring 1991 : Native American issue
  4. TAMAQUA Native American Issue by Joseph Bruchac, 1991
  5. Dacotah Territory 6. Special Native American Issue by James L. White, 1973
  6. DACOTAH TERRITORY NUMBER 6 WINTER 1973-74,SPECIAL NATIVE AMERICAN ISSUE.56 PAGES,STAPLED BINDING by JAMES WHITE (GUEST EDITOR), 1973
  7. Journal of the Modoc County Historical Society. No. 12 1990. Native American Issue. The Northern Piutes, Achumawi, The Modocs
  8. Tamaqua Winter/Spring 1991 : Native American issue by James McGowan, 1991-01-01
  9. Native American issues: 1999 state legislation by L. Jeanne Kaufmann, 2000
  10. Puget Soundings April 1977 Special Native American Issue including Three Poems by Duane Niatum, Arts Interview:Marvin Oliver by Pat Baillargeon and The Coast Salish of the Georgia-Puget Basin Another Look by Wayne Suttles , etc. by Pat Baillargeon, Wayne Suttles Duane Niatum, 1977-01-01
  11. SCREE 4. Native American Issue. by Joseph Bruchac, Blue Cloud, et al]. PERIODICAL. (Editor) [William Witherup, 1975
  12. The Alabama Historical Quarterly 1951 Volume 13, No.'s 1,2,3,4 Native-American Issue
  13. 1994 State Legislation on Native American Issues by Kimberly A. Morin, 1994-09
  14. New forum will focus on Native American issues.(Columns)(Column): An article from: The Register-Guard (Eugene, OR)

21. Native American Issues | National Parks Traveler
Pending the results of management plan vetting currently under way, the National Park Service is primed to turn administrative responsibilities for the South Unit of Badlands
http://www.nationalparkstraveler.com/article-category/native-american-issues
National Parks Traveler Home
Native American Issues
Submitted by Bob Janiskee on September 13, 2010 - 1:59am
Devils Tower National Monument has a Climbing Management Plan that Takes Native American Cultural Values into Account
Submitted by Bob Janiskee on September 24, 2008 - 3:59pm Devils Tower National Monument, the first national monument, celebrates its 102nd birthday on September 24. The tower is a mecca for climbing, but managing the sport requires the National Park Service to respect Native American cultural values and traditions. The annual June closing of recreational climbing is designed to do that.
Japanese Artist Creates Peace Sculpture for Tribal Connections Interpretive Site at Devils Tower National Monument
Submitted by Bob Janiskee on September 20, 2008 - 1:00am The new Tribal Connections interpretive site at Devils Tower National Monument features a dramatic sculpture by renowned Japanese artist Junkyu Muto. Muto’s Wind Circle/Sacred Circle of Smoke sculpture, the third in his world “peace sculpture” series, symbolizes Devils Tower as a sacred place for Native Americans.
Lakota Gather Peacefully at Mount Rushmore National Memorial, But Still Insist that the Black Hills Belong to Them

22. Canada In The Making - Aboriginals: Treaties & Relations
A look at treaties, laws, Aboriginal Rights Movement, and the events around them.
http://www.canadiana.org/citm/themes/aboriginals_e.html

Sources

PDF Version
Word Version Rich Text Format ... Text Format
Introduction
Curriculum Links Since the time of European First Contact, the course of Aboriginal history in Canada has been deeply altered by relations with Europeans and the laws they imposed on Aboriginals - laws like the Indian Act . Furthermore, major and minor treaties played a significant and important role in charting the course of European - Aboriginal relations within the country. This section of the Canada in the Making site will look at these treaties and laws, and the events that preceded and followed these changes. 1492 - 1779: From First Contact to the Peace and Friendship Treaties
Royal Proclamation
(1763) and
1764 - 1836: Pre-Confederation Treaties I
...
Sources

To better understand the evolution of the Constitution, be sure to read the pages explaining:
The Written and the Unwritten Constitution

Representative Government

Responsible Government

Common Law and Civil Law
... Next page

23. Catalog — Www.greenwood.com
This volume presents six major issues that have been divisive in and out of the Native American community. Readers will learn about the varied cultural, political......
http://www.greenwood.com/books/BookDetail.asp?dept_id=1&sku=GR2002

24. Native American Issues At BiggerBooks.com - Rosier, Paul C., 9780313320026, Soci
This volume presents six major issues that have been divisive in and out of the Native American community. Readers will learn about the varied cultural, political, social, and
http://www.biggerbooks.com/book/9780313320026

25. Indian Burial And Sacred Grounds Watch Home Page
Dedicated to issues relevant to Indian Burial Grounds and their protection.
http://www.ibsgwatch.imagedjinn.com/
INDIAN BURIAL AND SACRED GROUNDS WATCH
Welcome to the Indian Burial and Sacred Grounds Watch
Recommended: Click here to learn what is on this web site and where LINKS TO NEWS AND CAMPAIGNS CONCERNING: MD - Slaves' Graves, Indian Site At Heart of Land Dispute (24 April 2003)
SD - Some activity on Indian burial site OK, judge says (22 April 2003)
IL - Ancient Village Located in Illinois (21 April 2003)
FL - Titusville, FL. The American Indian Movement of Florida (Florida AIM) has demanded the Brevard County Sheriffs Office insure the protection of a heavily looted and imperiled Indigenous cemetery in north Brevard County known as Indian Station. (21 April 2003)
SD - Agency: River sites need protection (18 April 2003)
CA - Gov. Davis signs legislation to protect Quechan sacred site (16 April 2003)
MI - Native American Pride Committee alert for Bay City Michigan (14 April 2003)
ID - Ancient skull found in police raid turned over to Idaho tribe (11 April 2003)
CA - Ancient burials found at development site (April 2003)
WI - Ojibwe band may regain ancestors' burial ground (31 March 2003)
KS - Mounds reveal much about culture (28 March 2003) Canada - Rectifying 'science run amok': Chicago museum returning remains to tribe in Canada (27 March 2003) NM - Archaeological-Protection Case Settled (24 March 2003) General - Native American artifacts pose pesticide exposure risk (23 March 2003) SD - Appeals court debates S.D. land transfer (18 March 2003)

26. LawHelp Native American Issues Subtopics
Free legal information and selfhelp materials that provide information about non criminal legal problems affecting low-income people in Washington state.
http://washingtonlawhelp.org/WA/StateSubTopics.cfm/County/ /City/ /demoMode/= 1/

27. Native American Issues - Miami
The Sunshine State has the nation's stiffest pot penalties, but everyone seems to be lighting up.
http://www.miaminewtimes.com/related/to/Native American Issues/
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28. American Indian Ritual Object Repatriation Foundation - An Intercultural Partner
Foundation for the return of sacred objects to Indian tribes.
http://www.repatriationfoundation.org/
AC_FL_RunContent( 'codebase','http://download.macromedia.com/pub/shockwave/cabs/flash/swflash.cab#version=9,0,28,0','width','963','height','427','title','American Indian Ritual Object Repatriation Foundation','src','home3','quality','high','pluginspage','http://www.adobe.com/shockwave/download/download.cgi?P1_Prod_Version=ShockwaveFlash','movie','home3' ); //end AC code Foundation Mending The Circle News and Notes Resources ... In Memorium The Foundation is a non-federally funded, not-for-profit organization founded in 1992 and is committed to the repatriation of American Indian ceremonial material. Go To Foundation This definitive resource guide outlines the 1990 Native American Graves Protection and Repatriation Act and contains important information about the repatriation process. Go To Mending The Circle News and Notes was published bi-annually from 1994-2003. All archived copies are available to read on line. (Click below). Go To News and Notes Go To Resources Reuben A. Snake, Jr.
Michael Haney
Vine Deloria, Jr.

29. The Oklahoman Topics - TOPIC - Native American Issues | NewsOK.com
$387/Day Part Time Work Can You Type? Earn $387 Working From Home. As Seen On CNN, NBC Fox. World3News.com
http://newsok.com/topic/Native American Issues

30. Contemporary Native American Issues-- WWW Links
Contemporary Native American Issues and Useful Websites . Native American Authors Online Storytellers Native American Authors Online, by Karen Strom
http://web.ics.purdue.edu/~njp/352links.html
Contemporary Native American Issues
and Useful Websites
Native American Authors Online Storytellers: Native American Authors Online , by Karen Strom Internet Public Library, Native American Authors Poetics and Politics online transcriptions of a 1992 series at the University of Arizona, organized by Larry Evers and Ofelia Zepeda, which brought 13 acclaimed American Indian writers to campus. a powerful online video collection of Navajo and Laguna songs, Yaqui deer songs, Hopi philosophy, Apache and Hopi trickster tales, as well as conversations with Leslie Marmon Silko and Vine Deloria Jr. American Indians in Children's Literature , which critically discusses American Indians in children's books, the school curriculum, popular culture, and society-at-large, is a valuable and insightful blog authored by Debbie Reese (Nambe Pueblo) of the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign. Native American Women Playwrights Archive
Native American Cultures, Nations, Peoples Index of Native American Resources on the Internet , by Karen Strom Native Languages of the Americas: Preserving and Promoting American Indian Languages PowWows.com

31. From An Adoptee's Point Of View...
Information on coercive adoption from a native adoptee.
http://whisperingeagle.tripod.com/whisperingeagleshome/id1.html
Build your own FREE website at Tripod.com Share: Facebook Twitter Digg reddit document.write(lycos_ad['leaderboard']); document.write(lycos_ad['leaderboard2']); WHISPERING EAGLES HOMEPAGE Home Native American Indian Veterans From an Adoptee's Point of View... Beadwork and Crafts ... Webrings FROM AN ADOPTEE'S POINT OF VIEW When I was born I was adopted as an infant. I was raised in a normal white home, and had no contact with my culture or spiritual feelings until I was much older. I spent my childhood, as many children do, trying to do what my parents expected. I recall my parents constantly telling me that I was adopted because they loved me more than my own family had. As the years went by, I soon realized that I was not where I belonged and not doing what I was happy with. In 1992, I began a search for my biological family, and surprisingly to me I was talking to my oldest sister within 45 minutes. I moved home in 1998, and have been getting to know many of my new relatives, and enjoying the area and richness of life here. Although reuniting with a family that lost me so many years ago there have been rough times and good times, but it has been worth it to me. I felt like I needed to know where I came from and who I was, now that I am home I find that there is nothing missing anymore in my heart.

32. Goodbye COLUMBUS!
A native perspective on the legacy of Columbus and his crew.
http://www.indians.org/welker/byecolum.htm

Indigenous Peoples' Literature
GOODBYE COLUMBUS!
[The following appeared on a full page of the Rocky Mountain News on Saturday, October 8, 1994.] An Open Letter From the AMERICAN INDIAN MOVEMENT of Colorado and Our Allies When the Taino Indians saved Christopher Columbus from certain death on the fateful morning of October 12, 1492, a glorious opportunity presented itself for the cultures of both Europe and the Americas to flourish. What occurred was neither glorious nor heroic. Just as Columbus could not, and did not, "discover" a hemisphere already inhabited by nearly 100 million people, his arrival cannot, and will not, be recognized by indigenous peoples as a heroic and festive event. >From a Native perspective, Columbus' arrival was a disaster from the beginning. Although his own diaries reveal that he was greeted by the Tainos with the most generous hospitality he had ever known, he immediately began the enslavement and slaughter of the Indian peoples of the Caribbean. Defenders of Columbus and his holiday argue that critics unfairly judge Columbus, a 15th Century product, by the moral and legal standards of the late 20th century. Such a defense implies that there were no legal or moral constraints on actions such as Columbus' in 1492. In reality, European legal and moral principles acknowledged the natural rights of Indians and prohibited their slaughter or unjust wars against them. The issue of Columbus and Columbus Day is not easily resolvable by dismissing Columbus, the man. Columbus Day is a perpetuation of racist assumptions that the Americas were a wasteland cluttered with dark skin savages awaiting the blessings of European "civilization." Throughout this hemisphere, educational systems and the popular media perpetuate the myth that indigenous peoples have contributed nothing to the world, and, consequently, we should be grateful for our colonization, our dispossession, and our microwave ovens.

33. Native American Issues - Phoenix
frozen in time. the 20year war between navajos and hopis over hopis over homelands leaves them cold
http://www.phoenixnewtimes.com/related/to/Native American Issues/
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34. Christopher Columbus
Poem by a Cherokee author about the colonization of America from the Indian perspective.
http://www.indians.org/welker/columbu1.htm

Indigenous Peoples' Literature
Christopher Columbus
"Christopher Columbus is a symbol, not of a man, but of imperialism.
... Imperialism and colonialism are not something that happened decades
ago or generations ago, but they are still happening now with the exploitation
of people. ... The kind of thing that took place long ago in which people
were dispossessed from their land and forced out of subsistence economies
and into market economies those processes are still happening today." John Mohawk, Seneca, 1992
Columbus Day
by Jimmie Durham, Cherokee
In school I was taught the names
Columbus, Cortez, and Pizzaro and
A dozen other filthy murderers.
A bloodline all the way to General Miles,
Daniel Boone and general Eisenhower. No one mentioned the names Of even a few of the victims. But don't you remember Chaske, whose spine Was crushed so quickly by Mr. Pizzaro's boot? What words did he cry into the dust? What was the familiar name Of that young girl who danced so gracefully That everyone in the village sang with her Before Cortez' sword hacked off her arms As she protested the burning of her sweetheart?

35. Issues :: Native American Issues Kristi Noem, US House Representative-elect From
The official site for Kristi Noem, US House candidate from South Dakota. View updates, take action, contribute, and more.
http://www.kristiforcongress.com/issues/native-american-issues
Issues :: Native American Issues Kristi Noem, US House Candidate from South Dakota
Follow Kristi
Native American Issues The nine Dakota, Lakota, and Nakota Tribes in South Dakota face numerous challenges, but as I visit with Native American leaders I also sense their hope and optimism for the future. Specifically, I will work on three important areas of concern in Indian Country. First, I am committed to promoting economic development. Native Americans are proud and independent people. We can and must create a better environment for job creation in Indian Country. Second, I am committed to working to ensure there is basic law and order in Native American communities. Finally, we should focus resources on improved schools and better health care. We need to create a better environment and make Indian schools safer. A lack of resources and medical staff are constantly the biggest hurdles to quality health care on our reservations. Improving access and quality of care should be a key priority. The federal government and Native American people need to have a true government-to-government relationship. Consultation with the tribes on federal issues is critical if we want to find solutions that all parties can support. I believe this relationship must be based on partnership, not paternalism.

36. Jack Weatherford, Examining The Reputation Of Christopher Columbus
The sad history of Columbus interactions with the Taino people.
http://www.hartford-hwp.com/Taino/docs/columbus.html
Examining the reputation of
Christopher Columbus
By Jack Weatherford
Christopher Columbus' reputation has not survived the scrutiny of history, and today we know that he was no more the discoverer of America than Pocahontas was the discoverer of Great Britain. Native Americans had built great civilizations with many millions of people long before Columbus wandered lost into the Caribbean. Columbus' voyage has even less meaning for North Americans than for South Americans because Columbus never set foot on our continent, nor did he open it to European trade. Scandinavian Vikings already had settlements here in the eleventh century, and British fisherman probably fished the shores of Canada for decades before Columbus. The first European explorer to thoroughly document his visit to North America was the Italian explorer Giovanni Caboto, who sailed for England's King Henry VII and became known by his anglicized name, John Cabot. Caboto arrived in 1497 and claimed North America for the English sovereign while Columbus was still searching for India in the Caribbean. After three voyages to America and more than a decade of study, Columbus still believed that Cuba was a part of the continent of Asia, South America was only an island, and the coast of Central America was close to the Ganges River. This myth of the pawned jewels obscures the true and more sinister story of how Columbus financed his trip. The Spanish monarch invested in his excursion, but only on the condition that Columbus would repay this investment with profit by bringing back gold, spices, and other tribute from Asia. This pressing need to repay his debt underlies the frantic tone of Columbus' diaries as he raced from one Caribbean island to the next, stealing anything of value.

37. Native American Issues
Native American Issues Federal, state, and private attorneys rely on HRA to find and prepare historical evidence for litigation involving Indian issues.
http://www.hrassoc.com/page.aspx?Source=Litigation Support&menu=Native Ameri

38. American Indian Culture And American Society
Essay on American attitudes towards Indians past and present, with a call to cultural respect.
http://www.djmcadam.com/ojibwe.html
American Indian Culture and American Society
By D. J. McAdam
Attitudes in the Past The attitudes of American society at large have changed drastically toward American Indians during my lifetime, but I have a feeling that most of us who are not American Indians still haven't gotten it right. When I was a boy, Indians were the one-dimensional bad guys in cowboy vs. Indian movies. The plot was as predictable as it was lame: Indians would commit some atrocity on the nice white folks helpfully trying to bring civilization to an untamed land; romantically-portrayed cowboys would go settle the score, making the world safe for cattle-ranching and winning the undying love and admiration of the local schoolmarm in the process. The few deviations from this story line (such as the Lone Ranger's Indian sidekick) were notable for straying from the script. Still, we all wanted to be Indians. They were cool, knew how to survive in the woods, knew how to tread silently through a forest, dressed in loincloths, lived in tepees and carried tomahawks. And they played tom-toms.

39. Hidden From History: The Canadian Holocaust
The untold story of the genocide and exploitation of aboriginal peoples by church and state in Canada.
http://canadiangenocide.nativeweb.org/
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Kevin Annett is Live on Vancouver Co-op Radio

Kevin Annett Biography
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VIDEO - as seen on CTV
in QuickTime format
Petition:

STOP COMPLICITY IN GENOCIDE

Introduction
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Hidden from History:
The Canadian Holocaust
The Untold Story of the Genocide of Aboriginal Peoples by Church and State in Canada
by (Rev.) Kevin Annett
Recent Additions:

40. LawHelp Native American Issues Subtopics
LawHelpCalifornia.org provides access to legal selfhelp information and how to contact organizations for free or low-cost legal help for Californians.
http://www.lawhelpcalifornia.org/CA/StateSubTopics.cfm/County/ /demoMode/= 1/Lan

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