When in 1893 the Quechan Indians of Fort Yuma, California, gave up tracts of fertile farmland in the Colorado River basin in return for Federal aid, they hardly could have anticipated the ensuing deterioration of their economic, political, and cultural self-determination. Their circumstances devolved as has often been the case with Federal Indian policy. This intriguing book, original published in 1981, considers the Quechans as a case history of the frequent discrepancy between benevolently phrased national intention and exploitative local action. The story of their changing life is traced through the anti-poverty programs of the 1960s and '70s—showing how the implementation of these programs was affected by features of community life that...
Over the past two decades, ethnohistorians have expended considerable time and effort examining vari...
When white explorers encountered them in their Wisconsin homeland, the Kickapoo Indians lived in sep...
The Yuman-speaking peoples of the Southwest and California were for the most part non-agricultural i...
The Quechan people live along the lower part of the Colorado River in the United States. According t...
The Quechan Indians of southeastern California’s Fort Yuma Indian Reservation have occupied the fert...
The Colorado River weaves its course like a snake, moving south through the desert along the present...
The Quechan are a Yuman people who have traditionally lived along the lower part of the Colorado Riv...
Water is a basic necessity for survival, so how a culture chooses to use the water resources availab...
Most students of California Indians in the 1850s have dwelled on the violence that native people end...
The Navajo nation is one of the most frequently researched groups of Indians in North America. Anthr...
In January of 1987 we sat around the table of George Byron Nelson, Sr., a 69-year-old Hupa forester,...
This study examines how the Cocopah maintain and express a sense of continuity with their past and h...
One can best characterize the relations between Native Americans and the United States federal gover...
Over the past 20 years, scholars have expanded upon subsistence-driven models of indigenous labor an...
This dissertation explores how the introduction of Indian gaming has affected identity, culture, and...
Over the past two decades, ethnohistorians have expended considerable time and effort examining vari...
When white explorers encountered them in their Wisconsin homeland, the Kickapoo Indians lived in sep...
The Yuman-speaking peoples of the Southwest and California were for the most part non-agricultural i...
The Quechan people live along the lower part of the Colorado River in the United States. According t...
The Quechan Indians of southeastern California’s Fort Yuma Indian Reservation have occupied the fert...
The Colorado River weaves its course like a snake, moving south through the desert along the present...
The Quechan are a Yuman people who have traditionally lived along the lower part of the Colorado Riv...
Water is a basic necessity for survival, so how a culture chooses to use the water resources availab...
Most students of California Indians in the 1850s have dwelled on the violence that native people end...
The Navajo nation is one of the most frequently researched groups of Indians in North America. Anthr...
In January of 1987 we sat around the table of George Byron Nelson, Sr., a 69-year-old Hupa forester,...
This study examines how the Cocopah maintain and express a sense of continuity with their past and h...
One can best characterize the relations between Native Americans and the United States federal gover...
Over the past 20 years, scholars have expanded upon subsistence-driven models of indigenous labor an...
This dissertation explores how the introduction of Indian gaming has affected identity, culture, and...
Over the past two decades, ethnohistorians have expended considerable time and effort examining vari...
When white explorers encountered them in their Wisconsin homeland, the Kickapoo Indians lived in sep...
The Yuman-speaking peoples of the Southwest and California were for the most part non-agricultural i...