In the years after World War II, the United States federal government haltingly eliminated race-conscious law, a defining feature of the American tradition of government since the republic’s founding that seemed suddenly incongruous with the nation’s emerging role as a global advocate for ethnoreligious tolerance, free-market capitalism, and liberal universalism. Although the gradual dismantlement of Jim Crow segregation and the passage of civil rights legislation designed to remedy African American disfranchisement dominate the historical memory of the era, the colorblind turn also revolutionized the government’s relationship with American Indians. Although the Constitution, judicial precedent, and treaty law defined that relationship as o...
Over the past three centuries, academic and public discussions of race have been divided into two di...
"Indigeneity at the Crossroads of American Studies." Published as a special joint issue with America...
Modern American Indian nations face a racial paradox. On one hand, the citizenry of Indian nations i...
In the years after World War II, the United States federal government haltingly eliminated race-cons...
This thesis explores how the Haliwa-Saponi Indians Halifax and Warren County, North Carolina, challe...
This dissertation focuses upon the rapid changes that the southeastern American Indian groups someti...
MARVIN M. RICHARDSON: Racial Choices: The Emergence of the Haliwa-Saponi Indian Tribe, 1835-1971 (Un...
This project aims to investigate the ways in which the Lumbee Tribe of North Carolina has restructur...
Historically, Virginia's indigenous Indian tribes have been subsumed under non-Indian racial categor...
I. A Sketch of Naturalization in the United States ... A. The Historical Background of Naturalizatio...
The author discusses racial experience within the Lumbee Indian community. Citing earlier discussion...
His public life had been dedicated to improving the condition of Native people. Eastman worked with ...
[F]rom the very moment the general government came into existence to this time, it has exercised its...
Virginia’s Racial Integrity Act of 1924 recodified the state’s long-standing racial hierarchy as a m...
This article discusses the concept of political recognition (both federal and state) of Indian tribe...
Over the past three centuries, academic and public discussions of race have been divided into two di...
"Indigeneity at the Crossroads of American Studies." Published as a special joint issue with America...
Modern American Indian nations face a racial paradox. On one hand, the citizenry of Indian nations i...
In the years after World War II, the United States federal government haltingly eliminated race-cons...
This thesis explores how the Haliwa-Saponi Indians Halifax and Warren County, North Carolina, challe...
This dissertation focuses upon the rapid changes that the southeastern American Indian groups someti...
MARVIN M. RICHARDSON: Racial Choices: The Emergence of the Haliwa-Saponi Indian Tribe, 1835-1971 (Un...
This project aims to investigate the ways in which the Lumbee Tribe of North Carolina has restructur...
Historically, Virginia's indigenous Indian tribes have been subsumed under non-Indian racial categor...
I. A Sketch of Naturalization in the United States ... A. The Historical Background of Naturalizatio...
The author discusses racial experience within the Lumbee Indian community. Citing earlier discussion...
His public life had been dedicated to improving the condition of Native people. Eastman worked with ...
[F]rom the very moment the general government came into existence to this time, it has exercised its...
Virginia’s Racial Integrity Act of 1924 recodified the state’s long-standing racial hierarchy as a m...
This article discusses the concept of political recognition (both federal and state) of Indian tribe...
Over the past three centuries, academic and public discussions of race have been divided into two di...
"Indigeneity at the Crossroads of American Studies." Published as a special joint issue with America...
Modern American Indian nations face a racial paradox. On one hand, the citizenry of Indian nations i...