Administrative censuses of the Southern Cheyenne Indians from 1880,1891, and 1900 permit family reconstitution, identification of residence groups, and comparisons of fertility between monogamous and polygynous women, when the records are approached by ethnohistori cal methods. This approach includes an awareness of the aboriginal adoption practices, kinship system, and naming practices. It is argued that the biases and distortions of administrative records can be effectively corrected to add to our store of information on band and tribal societies.Yeshttps://us.sagepub.com/en-us/nam/manuscript-submission-guideline
While the merging of historical and anthropological outlooks has been a productive trend in Plains I...
"Indigeneity at the Crossroads of American Studies." Published as a special joint issue with America...
A survey of papers reporting the use of ethnographies in three population journals and an examinatio...
The purpose of this project was to review the work that tribes have done and are doing to enhance th...
In the 19th century the federal government and local Indian agents began a series of policies aimed ...
Like every nation in the world, John Moore argues in this exceptionally candid and respectful study...
In recent years there has been a resurgence of interest in the historical demography of American Ind...
One might expect a book on American Indian historical demography to be a lugubrious recitation of ca...
Russell Thornton provides a scholarly and comprehensive review of the population variations of an Am...
The utility of ethnoscience as a methodology to improve American Indian education programs is discus...
Data about Indigenous populations in the United States are inconsistent and irrelevant. Federal and ...
Even as American ethnology in the late‐nineteenth century continued to accumulate data about indigen...
The Cheyenne Nation has been a well documented tribe prior to the twentieth century. The following t...
This dissertation, "Honoring Kin: Gender, Kinship, and the Economy of Plains Apache Identity," addre...
The development, or lack of development, of American Indian agriculture after the subjugation of the...
While the merging of historical and anthropological outlooks has been a productive trend in Plains I...
"Indigeneity at the Crossroads of American Studies." Published as a special joint issue with America...
A survey of papers reporting the use of ethnographies in three population journals and an examinatio...
The purpose of this project was to review the work that tribes have done and are doing to enhance th...
In the 19th century the federal government and local Indian agents began a series of policies aimed ...
Like every nation in the world, John Moore argues in this exceptionally candid and respectful study...
In recent years there has been a resurgence of interest in the historical demography of American Ind...
One might expect a book on American Indian historical demography to be a lugubrious recitation of ca...
Russell Thornton provides a scholarly and comprehensive review of the population variations of an Am...
The utility of ethnoscience as a methodology to improve American Indian education programs is discus...
Data about Indigenous populations in the United States are inconsistent and irrelevant. Federal and ...
Even as American ethnology in the late‐nineteenth century continued to accumulate data about indigen...
The Cheyenne Nation has been a well documented tribe prior to the twentieth century. The following t...
This dissertation, "Honoring Kin: Gender, Kinship, and the Economy of Plains Apache Identity," addre...
The development, or lack of development, of American Indian agriculture after the subjugation of the...
While the merging of historical and anthropological outlooks has been a productive trend in Plains I...
"Indigeneity at the Crossroads of American Studies." Published as a special joint issue with America...
A survey of papers reporting the use of ethnographies in three population journals and an examinatio...