Publication Date
In 2025 | 0 |
Since 2024 | 6 |
Since 2021 (last 5 years) | 11 |
Since 2016 (last 10 years) | 19 |
Since 2006 (last 20 years) | 48 |
Descriptor
Source
Author
Publication Type
Education Level
Location
Arizona | 13 |
Canada | 12 |
Alaska | 4 |
Montana | 4 |
North Dakota | 3 |
Oklahoma | 3 |
Idaho | 2 |
Oregon | 2 |
United States | 2 |
Utah | 2 |
Washington | 2 |
More ▼ |
Laws, Policies, & Programs
Assessments and Surveys
What Works Clearinghouse Rating
Combs, Mary Carol; Nicholas, Sheilah E. – Language Policy, 2012
This article discusses the effect of Arizona's language policies on school districts serving Native American students. Although these policies were designed to restrict the access of Spanish-speaking immigrant and citizen students to bilingual education programs, their reach has extended into schools and school districts serving Native Americans.…
Descriptors: Federal Legislation, American Indians, Bilingual Education, Second Language Learning
Roessel, Monty – Journal of American Indian Education, 2011
This article presents the keynote address given by Dr. Monty Roessel, Superintendent of the Rough Rock (Navajo) Community School, at the Center for Indian Education Relaunch Celebration held on the ASU Tempe campus May 6, 2011. Here, the author reflects on the legacy of the Center, co-founded by his father, Dr. Robert A. (Bob) Roessel, Jr., who…
Descriptors: Navajo, Community Schools, Immersion Programs, American Indian Education
Krueger, Karla – School Library Media Activities Monthly, 2009
This article provides an overview of the three-volume reference set, "Treaties with American Indians: An Encyclopedia of Rights, Conflicts, and Sovereignty" published by ABC-CLIO. This reference work is edited by Donald Fixico, Arizona State University, and dedicated to the people of his tribes: (1) Shawnee; (2) Sac and Fox; (3) Seminole; and (4)…
Descriptors: Treaties, American Indians, Encyclopedias, Tribes
Meyer, Nadean – Education Libraries, 2011
Biased and inaccurate information about Native Americans continue in children's resources and remain in many of today's curriculum centers. While Native American students remain a minority in schools, accurate information is vital for understanding contemporary society and our history by both Native and non-Native students. Many states including…
Descriptors: Childrens Literature, Tribal Sovereignty, American Indians, Social Studies
Phillips, John – Tribal College Journal of American Indian Higher Education, 2011
Fort Belknap Indian Reservation's food system typifies that of many rural communities. Most food is grown and processed hundreds or thousands of miles away and transported long distances before it reaches the local grocery shelf. Like oil and gas, food prices are largely determined by international commodity markets driven by global supply,…
Descriptors: Food, Health Promotion, Water, Tribal Sovereignty
Senese, Guy; Wood, Gerald – Journal for Critical Education Policy Studies, 2009
Public education discourse is dominated by nostalgia for an idea of humanity, which has existed more strongly in high culture discourse than it has in public schools. Political liberal and conservative discourses agree that the process of compulsory public education is an expression of the state as it works to justly distribute "life…
Descriptors: Credentials, Equal Education, Tribal Sovereignty, Public Education
Morrison, Carolyn; Fox, Kathleen; Cross, Terry; Paul, Roger – Child Welfare, 2010
Tribal sovereignty is a theory that has gained credibility over the past few decades, but one that the child welfare field has still not fully embraced. A mainstream reluctance to understand or accept customary adoption, unique to tribal culture, illustrates the lack of credibility given to tribal child welfare beliefs and practices. Roger Paul, a…
Descriptors: Tribal Sovereignty, American Indians, Child Welfare, Social Structure
Montana Office of Public Instruction, 2010
In the year 1999, OPI [Montana Office of Public Instruction] brought together representatives from all the tribes in Montana and created 7 Essential Understandings. These are some of the major issues all tribes have in common. They form the basis for all of our curriculum efforts and initiatives. There is great diversity among the 12 tribal…
Descriptors: Tribal Sovereignty, American Indians, Ideology, American Indian Studies
Pearce, Margaret Wickens; Louis, Renee Pualani – American Indian Culture and Research Journal, 2008
Indigenous communities have successfully used Western geospatial technologies (GT) (for example, digital maps, satellite images, geographic information systems (GIS), and global positioning systems (GPS)) since the 1970s to protect tribal resources, document territorial sovereignty, create tribal utility databases, and manage watersheds. The use…
Descriptors: Indigenous Populations, Indigenous Knowledge, Tribal Sovereignty, Geographic Information Systems
Haynes Writer, Jeanette – Action in Teacher Education, 2010
The reality of tribal nationhood and the dual citizenship that Native Americans carry in their tribal nations and the United States significantly expands the definition and parameters of citizen education. Citizenship education means including and understanding the historical and political contexts of all U.S. citizens--especially, those…
Descriptors: Citizenship Education, American Indians, Tribes, Citizenship
Wilkins, David E.; Lightfoot, Sheryl – American Indian Quarterly, 2008
No comprehensive analysis of tribal constitutions has ever been conducted, so this project aims to begin filling this significant gap in American, constitutional, and comparative politics research. In this study, the authors examine only one small but significant element of Native constitutions: oaths of office for incoming tribal government…
Descriptors: Tribes, Word Order, Employment Practices, Public Officials
Mangan, Katherine – Chronicle of Higher Education, 2008
Interest in Indian law is growing as the economic clout and political influence of the nation's 562 federally recognized tribes have expanded. Arizona State's Indian Legal Program allows students who are pursuing their J.D.'s to simultaneously earn certificates in Indian law. They study the differences between the legal systems of tribes and that…
Descriptors: Law Schools, American Indians, Federal Government, Political Influences
Mayes, Arion T. – American Indian Quarterly, 2010
At approximately 9,500 years old, two sets of human remains from La Jolla, California (W-12), known as the University House Burials due to the physical location of their discovery on property owned by the University of California, San Diego, are some of the oldest in the United States. These burials are central to a repatriation controversy…
Descriptors: Human Body, Death, American Indians, Cultural Differences
Lee, Lloyd L. – American Indian Quarterly, 2008
For millennia, Navajo society was self-sufficient. After 1863, beginning with Kit Carson's murderous rampage among the Navajo and the subsequent removal to the Bosque Redondo reservation, Navajo nationhood changed. Navajo society began a slow transformation away from the distinct Dine way of life. In the twentieth century Navajo nationalism was…
Descriptors: Navajo (Nation), Epistemology, Social Problems, Social Change
D'Oney, J. Daniel – American Indian Culture and Research Journal, 2008
Hurricanes Katrina and Rita affected hundreds of thousands in southern Louisiana. To say that they touched people of every stripe and color dramatically is a gross understatement. Aside from the loss of life and property damage, families were uprooted, traditions disrupted, and one of the largest migrations in American history forced on a state…
Descriptors: Social Studies, American Indian Culture, American Indian History, American Indian Studies