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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
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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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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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Loew, Patty; Thannum, James – American Indian Quarterly, 2011
Twenty-five years ago a "perfect storm" of economic, environmental, and social conditions swirled in northern Wisconsin and battered attempts by the Ojibwe to exercise their treaty-based fishing rights. This article examines the socioeconomic, political, and cultural factors that contributed to the spearfishing crisis twenty-five years…
Descriptors: Treaties, American Indian Education, News Reporting, Cultural Influences
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Anthes, Bill – American Indian Quarterly, 2008
Since the passage in 1988 of the Indian Gaming Regulatory Act, which recognized the authority of Native American tribal groups to operate gaming facilities free from state and federal oversight and taxation, gambling has emerged as a major industry in Indian Country. Casinos offer poverty-stricken reservation communities confined to meager slices…
Descriptors: Tribal Sovereignty, American Indians, Political Power, Tribes
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Russell, Caskey – American Indian Culture and Research Journal, 2008
American Indian treaties and treaty law may seem to fall solely within the purview of legal methodology and critical analysis, yet the 367 American Indian treaties signed with the US federal government beg for the type of dissection and analysis generally associated with cultural and literary critical theory. The tools by which texts are dissected…
Descriptors: Critical Theory, Treaties, American Indians, State Government
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Holm, Sharon – American Indian Quarterly, 2008
In Leslie Marmon Silko's 1977 novel "Ceremony" the "primacy of the geographical" has often been interpreted as a particularly holistic and healing sense of place--what the critic Robert M. Nelson has characterized as the "spirit of place." This heightened awareness of the spiritual and redemptive power of the natural and the imaginative in…
Descriptors: Ceremonies, American Indians, American Indian Culture, Authors