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Butterfield, Nancy; And Others – Tribal College: Journal of American Indian Higher Education, 1992
Describes individual, community, organizational, and college examples of efforts to promote sobriety and recovery from alcoholism among Native Americans. Discusses a sobriety movement tenet that alcoholism threatens the entire tribe and requires collective action. Highlights links with a broader movement for spiritual and cultural renewal. (DMM)
Descriptors: Alcoholism, American Indian Education, American Indians, College Role
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Schneider, William J.; And Others – 1972
As one phase of a research program designed for purposes of developing future youth programs and as one source from which hypotheses, relevant to the occupational and social adjustment of rural southwestern Indian youth (Navajo and Papago), were generated and later tested, this study presented a survey of literature concerned with the environment,…
Descriptors: Alcoholism, American Indians, Cultural Context, Cultural Differences
Lethbridge Univ. (Alberta). Four Worlds Development Project. – 1984
This paper promotes discussion by native community groups of the meaning of physical and mental health, the differences between treatment and prevention, and how education contributes to disease and health of children. Education's role in disease prevention is defined as helping the learner respond appropriately to stress arising from the…
Descriptors: Adult Education, Alcohol Education, Alcoholism, American Indian Education
Jore, Carlotta P.; And Others – 1975
The Mountain-Plains Task Force on Indian families was established due to the low success rate of Indian enrollees in completing the Mountain-Plains program, a model educational program for the rural disadvantaged population. As a consequence, the task force was proposed to identify program failure factors and to suggest ways of retaining Indian…
Descriptors: Adjustment (to Environment), Alcoholism, American Indian Culture, American Indians
Curley, Georgia – 1984
On the Northern Cheyenne Reservation--where the alcoholism rate for Cheyenne persons 14 years and older is approximately 80%--there are numerous resources available to the recovering alcoholic, but children in alcoholic families are sometimes forgotten. There is a need for preventive programs to insure that today's children do not become the next…
Descriptors: Alcohol Education, Alcoholism, American Indian Culture, American Indian Education