This article first examines the historical background of the Virginian-American Indian identity after European contact in Part I. This section looks at the early interactions between American Indians and colonial settlers, the treaties that defined American Indian identity, and the first government-to-government relationships between the tribes and colonial powers. It also follows the changing social attitudes toward American Indians. Part II discusses how social attitudes in the early twentieth century about American Indians led to longreaching legal effects for Virginian-American Indians. Part III details the federal recognition process, and discusses how and why it denies Virginia\u27s tribes an equal place in modern America. The article...
This article critiques the contemporary doctrine of Indian tribal self-determination thirty years af...
Courts address equal protection questions about the distinct legal treatment of American Indian trib...
This article examines the claims to an Indigenous identity made by the four state-recognized Abenaki...
This article first examines the historical background of the Virginian-American Indian identity afte...
This article first examines the historical background of the Virginian-American Indian identity afte...
Relations between European Americans (via the Federal government) and Native American tribes have be...
The United States government attempted to eliminate Native Americans through outright physical exter...
Historically, Virginia's indigenous Indian tribes have been subsumed under non-Indian racial categor...
This article describes the profound changes to American Indian kinship and social structures caused ...
If anything be true of the United States in the second half of the Twentieth Century, it is the rise...
"Indigeneity at the Crossroads of American Studies." Published as a special joint issue with America...
First, I will set the colonial context for equality that was anchored in a narrow white male model a...
This Article will demonstrate that virtually all elements of Indian affairs can be traced to the dec...
Begin at the beginning: there was a time, not so long ago as such things are reckoned-say, about hal...
Virginia’s Racial Integrity Act of 1924 recodified the state’s long-standing racial hierarchy as a m...
This article critiques the contemporary doctrine of Indian tribal self-determination thirty years af...
Courts address equal protection questions about the distinct legal treatment of American Indian trib...
This article examines the claims to an Indigenous identity made by the four state-recognized Abenaki...
This article first examines the historical background of the Virginian-American Indian identity afte...
This article first examines the historical background of the Virginian-American Indian identity afte...
Relations between European Americans (via the Federal government) and Native American tribes have be...
The United States government attempted to eliminate Native Americans through outright physical exter...
Historically, Virginia's indigenous Indian tribes have been subsumed under non-Indian racial categor...
This article describes the profound changes to American Indian kinship and social structures caused ...
If anything be true of the United States in the second half of the Twentieth Century, it is the rise...
"Indigeneity at the Crossroads of American Studies." Published as a special joint issue with America...
First, I will set the colonial context for equality that was anchored in a narrow white male model a...
This Article will demonstrate that virtually all elements of Indian affairs can be traced to the dec...
Begin at the beginning: there was a time, not so long ago as such things are reckoned-say, about hal...
Virginia’s Racial Integrity Act of 1924 recodified the state’s long-standing racial hierarchy as a m...
This article critiques the contemporary doctrine of Indian tribal self-determination thirty years af...
Courts address equal protection questions about the distinct legal treatment of American Indian trib...
This article examines the claims to an Indigenous identity made by the four state-recognized Abenaki...