For most of the past century, a migration has been taking place within the United States: Native Americans have been moving from tribal and rural lands to America’s cities. But Native Americans have not abandoned reservations for urban life. Instead, they’ve built a network that joins reservations, rural lands, suburban communities and urban centers, with Los Angeles as the “urban Indian capital of the United States.
As American Indian tribes across North America have continued to pursue the strengthening of tribal ...
Two new books, Native Hubs by Reyna Ramirez and Going Indian by James Hamill, contribute to an ever-...
Post-Columbian borderlands between competing Euro-American empires and North America’s indigenous po...
Includes bibliographical references (pages 129-132)This study focuses on the contemporary movement o...
An important relationship has existed between Native Americans and cities from pre-Columbian times t...
This paper places the subject of urban Indians in North America within the historical reality of the...
Article uses the Indian-Pioneer papers to show a more congenial relationship between white settlers ...
The history of California Indians is a different story from that of other ethnic groups who came in ...
This comparative study demonstrates a uniquely spatial phenomenon targeting American Indian peoples ...
In 2014, more than 70% of American Indians live in urban areas away from reservations. This disserta...
The Owens Valley Paiute, traditional caretakers of the “Land of Flowing Water,” face continued threa...
The Cupeño of Southern California exemplify forced removal of Indians from their homelands which has...
The history of Native people in Southern California is both unique in that, until the last few decad...
Vine Deloria, Jr., the most important Indian chronicler of indigenous political, legal, and religiou...
As far as the eye can see and beyond, the hills and mountains, the deserts, even the coastal islands...
As American Indian tribes across North America have continued to pursue the strengthening of tribal ...
Two new books, Native Hubs by Reyna Ramirez and Going Indian by James Hamill, contribute to an ever-...
Post-Columbian borderlands between competing Euro-American empires and North America’s indigenous po...
Includes bibliographical references (pages 129-132)This study focuses on the contemporary movement o...
An important relationship has existed between Native Americans and cities from pre-Columbian times t...
This paper places the subject of urban Indians in North America within the historical reality of the...
Article uses the Indian-Pioneer papers to show a more congenial relationship between white settlers ...
The history of California Indians is a different story from that of other ethnic groups who came in ...
This comparative study demonstrates a uniquely spatial phenomenon targeting American Indian peoples ...
In 2014, more than 70% of American Indians live in urban areas away from reservations. This disserta...
The Owens Valley Paiute, traditional caretakers of the “Land of Flowing Water,” face continued threa...
The Cupeño of Southern California exemplify forced removal of Indians from their homelands which has...
The history of Native people in Southern California is both unique in that, until the last few decad...
Vine Deloria, Jr., the most important Indian chronicler of indigenous political, legal, and religiou...
As far as the eye can see and beyond, the hills and mountains, the deserts, even the coastal islands...
As American Indian tribes across North America have continued to pursue the strengthening of tribal ...
Two new books, Native Hubs by Reyna Ramirez and Going Indian by James Hamill, contribute to an ever-...
Post-Columbian borderlands between competing Euro-American empires and North America’s indigenous po...