Indigenous Governance Database
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![Preserving Culture: 6 Early Childhood Language Immersion Programs Preserving Culture: 6 Early Childhood Language Immersion Programs](/sites/nnigovernance.arizona.edu/files/styles/resources/public/resources/Screen%2520Shot%25202016-10-20%2520at%252010.10.48%2520AM.png?itok=1vk-vPTb)
Preserving Culture: 6 Early Childhood Language Immersion Programs
Language immersion schools have proved to be enormously beneficial for young learners’ academics. To quote Dr. Janine Pease-Pretty on Top, Crow, founding president of Little Big Horn College, “Solid data from the Navajo, Blackfeet and Assiniboine immersion schools experience indicates that the…
![Yurok Tribe to release condors in California Yurok Tribe to release condors in California](/sites/nnigovernance.arizona.edu/files/styles/resources/public/resources/Screen%2520Shot%25202016-10-19%2520at%252010.05.28%2520AM.png?itok=bOh5Q_g9)
Yurok Tribe to release condors in California
Yurok tribal tradition holds the California condor as sacred, with ancient stories saying the giant birds fly closest to the sun and are the best messengers to carry prayers. Now, after five years of research, the far northern California-based tribe has received permission to release captive-bred…
![U.S. Land Rights for Indians? U.S. Land Rights for Indians?](/sites/nnigovernance.arizona.edu/files/styles/resources/public/resources/Screen%2520Shot%25202016-10-18%2520at%252012.44.19%2520PM.png?itok=t5jbcz1B)
U.S. Land Rights for Indians?
There is an argument within federal-Indian law literature that suggests Indians could have more effectively protected land under U.S. law if they owned land in fee simple rather than under trust. There is better protection for private property under the U.S. Constitution than can be had from…
![As old ways faded on reservations, tribal power shifted As old ways faded on reservations, tribal power shifted](/sites/nnigovernance.arizona.edu/files/styles/resources/public/resources/Screen%2520Shot%25202016-10-19%2520at%25209.26.12%2520AM.png?itok=3mJlJek-)
As old ways faded on reservations, tribal power shifted
Long before the 1934 Indian Reorganization Act transformed tribal government, before nepotism and retaliation became plagues upon reservation life, there were nacas. Headsmen, the Lakota and Dakota called them. Men designated from their tiospayes, or extended families, to represent their clans when…
![Red Lake Constitution Reform Initiative Community Engagement Meeting held in Redby Red Lake Constitution Reform Initiative Community Engagement Meeting held in Redby](/sites/nnigovernance.arizona.edu/files/styles/resources/public/resources/Screen%2520Shot%25202016-10-19%2520at%252010.49.47%2520AM.png?itok=Ev4uHLNk)
Red Lake Constitution Reform Initiative Community Engagement Meeting held in Redby
The second of six scheduled Red Lake Constitution Reform Initiative Community Engagement Meetings was held at the Redby Community Center on March 24, 2014 from 5:30 PM to 8:30 PM. The first meeting was held at the Minneapolis American Indian Center on March 22, 2014 with about 60 people in…
![Eastern Band of Cherokee Replenishes Iconic White-Tailed Deer on Its Lands Eastern Band of Cherokee Replenishes Iconic White-Tailed Deer on Its Lands](/sites/nnigovernance.arizona.edu/files/styles/resources/public/resources/Screen%2520Shot%25202016-10-19%2520at%252010.42.02%2520AM.png?itok=mPniSVd3)
Eastern Band of Cherokee Replenishes Iconic White-Tailed Deer on Its Lands
The Eastern Band of Cherokee, deprived for centuries of the white-tailed deer that symbolizes their culture, are in the process of getting their icon back. Though deer are considered almost a pest in many parts, devouring gardens and proliferating, the Cherokee themselves, who have cherished the…
![Red Lake Constitutional Reform Wraps up Informational Meetings Red Lake Constitutional Reform Wraps up Informational Meetings](/sites/nnigovernance.arizona.edu/files/styles/resources/public/resources/Screen%2520Shot%25202016-10-19%2520at%252010.12.23%2520AM.png?itok=Fx9H-ut6)
Red Lake Constitutional Reform Informational Meetings Held
The meeting at Bemidji was one leg of the second round of informational meetings conducted by the Red Lake Constitutional Reform Committee (CRC) in order to seek input and feedback from the membership regarding Constitutional Reform. Meetings are held in Duluth and the Twin Cites in addition to the…
![Tribal Rights Legend and Leader Billy Frank Jr. Walks On Tribal Rights Legend and Leader Billy Frank Jr. Walks On](/sites/nnigovernance.arizona.edu/files/styles/resources/public/resources/Screen%2520Shot%25202016-10-19%2520at%25209.09.08%2520AM.png?itok=z4gNuaAM)
Tribal Rights Legend and Leader Billy Frank Jr. Walks On
In 2004, we celebrated 30 years since the Boldt Decision of 1974, the landmark Indian fishing rights victory, that Billy Frank Jr. fought so hard for. “Frank is widely credited as conscience and soul of the efforts by Indian people in Washington to secure their rights to a fair share of fish on…
![Chickasaw Nation: The Fight to Save a Dying Native American Language Chickasaw Nation: The Fight to Save a Dying Native American Language](/sites/nnigovernance.arizona.edu/files/styles/resources/public/resources/Screen%2520Shot%25202016-10-10%2520at%252011.11.26%2520AM.png?itok=Y_V0y9RD)
Chickasaw Nation: The Fight to Save a Dying Native American Language
A 50,000-year-old indigenous Native American tribe that has weathered the conquistadors, numerous wars with the Europeans, the American Revolution and the Civil War is now fighting to preserve its language and culture by embracing modern technology. There are 6,000 languages spoken in the world but…
![Billy Frank Jr.: A World Treasure (1931- 2014) Billy Frank Jr.: A World Treasure (1931- 2014)](/sites/nnigovernance.arizona.edu/files/styles/resources/public/resources/Screen%2520Shot%25202016-10-20%2520at%252010.09.32%2520AM.png?itok=6bZG1Tvc)
Billy Frank Jr.: A World Treasure (1931- 2014)
“I was the go-to-jail guy.” That’s how Billy Frank, Jr., (Nisqually) often described his role during the treaty fishing rights struggle in the Pacific Northwest of the 1960s and ‘70s. Beginning as a teenager of 14, he went to jail more than 50 times and was arrested more than three times that. His…
![Indian Country Today Article](/sites/nnigovernance.arizona.edu/files/styles/resources/public/2023-02/Indian%20Country%20Today%20Article.png?itok=JR9lL75S)
Dismembering Natives: The Violence Done by Citizenship Fights
Outside Indian Country most don't realize that over the past 10 years, several thousand people have had their tribal citizenship status terminated. Most were not dismembered for wrongdoing or adopted by other Native nations. They were simply identified by their elected officials as allegedly no…
![Tribal Transformation: Quechan Help Bring Lower Colorado River Habitat Back to Life Tribal Transformation: Quechan Help Bring Lower Colorado River Habitat Back to Life](/sites/nnigovernance.arizona.edu/files/styles/resources/public/resources/Screen%2520Shot%25202016-10-19%2520at%252010.36.41%2520AM.png?itok=-0qQvfyX)
Tribal Transformation: Quechan Help Bring Lower Colorado River Habitat Back to Life
The Colorado River, once home to riverboats and a source of liquid sustenance to many, has been referred to as America’s Nile, the most important river in the Southwest. Until recently a section of the lower Colorado with the city of Yuma on one side and the Quechan Indian tribe on the other was a…
![South Dakota, tribe finalize plan to serve parole South Dakota, tribe finalize plan to serve parole](/sites/nnigovernance.arizona.edu/files/styles/resources/public/resources/Screen%2520Shot%25202016-10-19%2520at%252010.39.13%2520AM.png?itok=ysNMlnBI)
South Dakota, tribe finalize plan to serve parole
South Dakota and Sisseton-Wahpeton Oyate Tribal officials finalized an agreement on a pilot program for tribal members to serve parole at home on the reservation. Sisseton-Wahpeton Chairman Robert Shepherd and Department of Corrections Secretary Denny Kaemingk signed the intergovernmental agreement…
![Forest County Potawatomi Renewables Program Nets EPA Top 30 Nod Forest County Potawatomi Renewables Program Nets EPA Top 30 Nod](/sites/nnigovernance.arizona.edu/files/styles/resources/public/resources/Screen%2520Shot%25202016-10-18%2520at%252012.51.02%2520PM.png?itok=U48voIKN)
Forest County Potawatomi Renewables Program Nets EPA Top 30 Nod
They squelched a mine, established air-quality monitoring and built a solar plant. Where does a tribe go from there? For the Forest County Potawatomi Community it meant going deeper. The tribe has translated traditional values into a program that uses cutting-edge technologies and sophisticated…
![Indian Country Today Article](/sites/nnigovernance.arizona.edu/files/styles/resources/public/2023-02/Indian%20Country%20Today%20Article.png?itok=JR9lL75S)
Harvard Project Names Three Honoring Nations Leaders
Sharing outstanding programs in tribal self-governance and helping to expand the capacities of Tribal leaders through learning from each others’ successes is the mission of the Harvard Project on American Indian Economic Development’s Honoring Nations program. Recently the Honoring Nations program…
![Glimmers of hope on Pine Ridge Indian Reservation Glimmers of hope on Pine Ridge Indian Reservation](/sites/nnigovernance.arizona.edu/files/styles/resources/public/resources/Screen%2520Shot%25202016-10-19%2520at%252010.29.26%2520AM.png?itok=2jTytwzQ)
Glimmers of hope on Pine Ridge Indian Reservation
The Pine Ridge Indian Reservation has become emblematic of rural poverty, neglect and the plight of struggling American Indians. But across the reservation, there are glimmers of hope and resistance against the monumental challenges the Lakota people face. In the case of Alice Phelps and the…
![Indian Country Today Article](/sites/nnigovernance.arizona.edu/files/styles/resources/public/2023-02/Indian%20Country%20Today%20Article.png?itok=JR9lL75S)
Good Data Leads to Good Sovereignty
The lack of good data about U.S. American Indian and Alaska Native populations hinders tribes’ development activities, but it also highlights a space for sovereign action. In coming years, tribes will no doubt continue to advocate for better national data and at the same time increasingly implement…
![Tulalips wield new power against domestic violence Tulalips wield new power against domestic violence](/sites/nnigovernance.arizona.edu/files/styles/resources/public/resources/IGDresources2.jpg?itok=f4H333P7)
Tulalips wield new power against domestic violence
The Tulalip Tribes are now one of just three Native American tribes in the country to take advantage of a federal program designed to better combat domestic violence on tribal lands. In an agreement signed with the U.S. Attorney’s Office Friday during a regular meeting of the Tribes’ board of…
![Teach youth about forms of government Teach youth about forms of government](/sites/nnigovernance.arizona.edu/files/styles/resources/public/resources/Screen%2520Shot%25202016-10-19%2520at%252010.07.00%2520AM.png?itok=CN3OiJz1)
Teach youth about forms of government
Why aren’t the schools teaching about the IRA form of government? Why aren’t they teaching about the traditional tiospaye form of government? The disenchantment and what appears to be apathy or even seditiousness toward the Indian Reorganization Act system of government have become “normal” among…
![Citizen Potawatomi Nation reverses decline through strong leaders, entrepreneurship](/sites/nnigovernance.arizona.edu/files/styles/resources/public/2023-03/Citizen%20Potawatomi%20Nation%20reverses%20decline%20through%20strong%20leaders%20entrepreneurship.jpg?itok=yg6OySgV)
Citizen Potawatomi Nation reverses decline through strong leaders, entrepreneurship
The big idea: In recent years, some tribes have reaped huge profits from their gambling operations. Most American Indians, however, are still mired in poverty, unemployment, addictions, ill health and hopelessness. Is there a way to create a better future in Indian Country? The Citizen Potawatomi…
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