Library Guides american Indians/native americans. Bureau of Indian Affairs (US), www.doi.gov/bureauindian IndianAffairs Laws and treaties, http//digital.library.okstate.edu http://www.uwm.edu/Library/ris/guides/india154.htm
Extractions: There are a number of information resources for Native American Studies on the World Wide Web. Listed below are just a few sites that have useful information and/or links. For more Web resources, search the Internet using various search engines (AltaVista, Google). For other useful sites consult Multicultural Resources on the Internet. United States and Canada [call number (REF) E 184 .A1 G874 1999]. Alaska Natives and American Indians www.uaa.alaska.edu/just/rlinks/natives/index.html American Indian Culture Research Center www.bluecloud.org/dakota.html American Indians/Native Americans library.louisville.edu/government/subjects/indians/indian.html Center for Multilingual, Multicultural Research Native American Resources www-rcf.usc.edu/~cmmr/Native_American.html Index of Native American Resources on the Internet http://www.hanksville.org/NAresources Information on Individual Native Nations www.nativeculture.com/lisamitten/nations.html Native American History and Culture www.si.edu/resource/faq/nmai/start.htm
RESEARCHING AMERICAN INDIAN LAW treaties with native american Tribes, and the creation of SuperintendentÂ’s Officefor Indian Affairs. United States code (USC) (http//www.access.gpo.gov/ http://www.law.umkc.edu/faculty/profiles/stancel/indian.htm
Extractions: RESEARCHING AMERICAN INDIAN LAW American Indian law presents a complex combination of statutes, rules, regulations, tribal laws, treaties, and agency and judicial decisions. At the federal level, laws are recorded in Statutes at Large which is codified in Title 25 of the United States Code . Administrative decisions are reported in the Federal Register and codified in Title 25 of the Code of Federal Regulations . Tribal laws (constitutions and charters of individual tribes) can be found in the series "The Constitutions and Laws of the American Indian Tribes." [LOCATION : KF8228 .C903 date] MAJOR LEGISLATIVE ACTS The following acts represent some of the major pieces of legislation that govern federal American Indian law. United States Constitution (based on the) Articles of Confederation - Congress is granted the power to regulate commerce with the Indian tribes, President empowered to make treaties with the consent of the Senate. Article I Section 8, clause 3
BU Libraries | Research Guide | Native American Studies The volumes cover US government treaties with native Code), and links to other Webresources on native Americans. http//www.ihs.gov/ Indian Land Cessions in http://www.bu.edu/library/guides/native.html
Extractions: Catalogs E-Resources E-Journals Guides ... Ref Shelf Library research guide to the indigenous peoples of the continental U.S., Alaska, and Canada, with some information on native Hawaiians and the Indians of Mexico and Central and South America. Covers encyclopedias, dictionaries, handbooks, ethnographic surveys, periodical indexes and abstracts, databases, directories, statistical sources, bibliographies, book catalogs, dissertation sources, government publications, and microform collections, from the early 1970s to 1993.
Annotated Selection Of Websites For International Family Law Research Department of State Treaty Actions http//www.state.gov/s/l lawschool.westlaw.comFulltext coverage of international and native american treaties to which the http://people.hofstra.edu/staff/lisa_a_spar/intlfam/intlfam_ho.htm
Treaty Research: Sources And Tips treaties Between The United States and native americans. The full texts of treatieswith the US are provided via Canadoamerican treaties Web Site. (gov. Docs. http://www.lib.msu.edu/schaubm1/treaties.htm
Extractions: This guide is far from comprehensive; rather, it provides information on a selection of the most important starting points and strategies. Most of the materials listed below are located in Main Library Reference, the Government Documents Library, or are accessible via the WWW. Please ask at the Main Library Reference Desk (Main Library, 1st floor East) if you need further assistance. Treaty Texts Special Topics: Native Americans Special Topics: Tax Treaties Special Topics: Tips for Tracking ... To the Top Index to Multilateral Treaties: A Chronological List of Multiparty International Agreements from the 16th Century through 1963, with Citations to Their Texts . (Reference JX171 .H35) Produced by the Harvard Law School Library, this volume provides subject and country access to over 3800 treaties concluded between 1596 and 1963. Citations to the full text are provided. Information on Intergovernmental Organizations (IGOS) and Law in the MSU Libraries: Information by Subject is a selective bibliography of subject-specific compilations of multilateral treaties and conventions. Broad subject areas include: Arms Control, Disarmament and War; Culture and Cultural Heritage; Education; Environment; Fisheries, Food and Agriculture; Health; Human Rights; Intellectual Property; Labour; Oceans and Law of the Sea; Outer Space; Peacekeeping; Telecommunications; Trade; and Women's Rights. Links to full-text resources are provided.
Online Resources - Native American History - Primary Documents http//www.archives.gov/digital_classroom/lessons dominated by removal, treaties,reservations, and allotments to individual native Americans.” The primary http://cehs.unl.edu/ushistory/online/native/primary.html
Extractions: Hosted by the Yale Law School, this database contains documents pertaining to Native American studies. The collection is among the most extensive Internet source for this type of material. The material on this site includes, but is not limited to, treaties, court cases, and presidential speeches. Because those involved with this project keep it updated, the collection will possibly expand in the upcoming months. The information on this website concerns Alice Cunningham Fletcher and her ethnographic work among the Sioux. Educated in the best Bostonian preparatory schools, she gained some repute as a lecturer before her western travels. Her interest in the Siouan peoples eventually lead Fletcher to live among the tribes in order to study their culture. Digital reproductions of her diary, photographs, and a collection of oral literature recorded by Fletcher are included.
Gov Isaac Stevens the negotiation of treaties with the native american tribes in In roughly two years,gov. Stevens negotiated treaties with the Nisqually, Puyallup, Snoqualmie http://home.comcast.net/~suvcw/people/stevens/stevens.html
Extractions: Governor Isaac I. Stevens First Territorial Governor, 1853-1857. Democrat While many of us may be familiar with the name of Isaac Stevens, how much do we know about him? Most of us would be able to label him a Governor of our state, yet, in actuality he was the first Territorial Governor serving in that post from 1853-1857. One of his primary responsibilities was the negotiation of treaties with the Native American tribes in this state. To this day, these treaties still control the federal and state governments' relationships with those tribes. Yet who was this individual? Isaac Stevens was a descendant of two 17th Century Puritan immigrants. His ancestors were farmers, military men, and community leaders in the Andover area of Maine. His parents were Isaac & Hannah (Cummings) Stevens, who were also strong supporters of Andrew Jackson and the Democratic Party. Isaac was their third child, but first son, and was born with some physical impairments that today would be associated with a problematic pituitary gland. Whatever the physical impairments, Isaac was a child prodigy when it came to mathematics. In March of 1835, at the age of 16, Isaac was admitted to West Point and graduated first in his class. He received a lieutenants commission in "Totten's Engineer Corps". While stationed in Newport, RI, he met and married on 8 Sep 1841, Margaret "Meg" Cyman Hazard. While at Newport, Isaac was responsible for rebuilding New England's coastal forts.
LII - Results For "treaties" Commission (NWIFC) The twenty native american treaty tribes www.nwifc.wa.gov/ SubjectsFisheries America Washington, Western treaties Natural resources http://wa.lii.org/search?searchtype=subject;query=Treaties;subsearch=Treaties
MATC Library - Resouces By Subject - Native Americans The volumes cover US government treaties with native americans from 17781883 Stateof Wisconsin native american Tribes http//www.wisconsin.gov/state/core http://matcmadison.edu/library/library/subjectresources/nativeamericans.htm
Extractions: An historically significant, seven volume compilation of U.S. treaties, laws and executive orders pertaining to Native American Indian tribes. The volumes cover U.S. Government treaties with Native Americans from 1778-1883 (Volume II) and U.S. laws and executive orders concerning Native Americans from 1871-1970 (Volumes I, III-VII). National Congress of American Indians
FWDP -- North, Central And South American Documents the Protection of the British gov t in Trail of Broken treaties 20 Points for Renewal TXT Information on Eddie Hatcher - native american Political Prisoner http://www.cwis.org/americas.html
Extractions: North, South and Central American Documents Central and South America 96-16746.TXT - E/CN.4/Sub.2/AC.4/1996/3/Add.1 Health and Indigenous Peoples - Statments by the Four Directions Council, Coordinating Association of Indigenous Communities in El Salvador, CHIRAPAQ, Legal Committee on Self-Sufficient Development for the Autochthonous Peoples of the Andes, and the Indigenous Parliament of America - UNWGIP 14th Session 12 June 1996 NFC_JOE.TXT - Keynote Address by Joe DeLaCruz to the National Fisheries Conference, Union of British Columbia Indian Chiefs, National Indian Brotherhood 5/20/80 NWPACTRT.TXT - The 1994 Pacific Northwest Treaty - Multilateral treaty between Indian Nations in the Northwest U.S. and Canada NWPACBAK.TXT - Background and List of Objectives - 1994 Pacific Northwest Treaty 1ST_NAT.TXT ABOR_SOV.TXT - Aboriginal Rights and the Sovereignty of Countries (including a case study of the Canadian Arctic) by Marc Denhez, Inuit Tapirisat of Canada ABORDECL.TXT
Electronic Sources Includes treaties, governmental statements, Indian proclamations, tribal http//www.access.gpo.gov/su_docs/dpos Indexto native american Legal Resources http http://www.dsl.psu.edu/library/lrr/guides/NativeAm/elec.html
Native American Law american Indian Tribes ) an extensive collection of links to native american andAboriginal http//one-web.org/oneida/treaties.html. http//snake1.cr.usgs.gov. http://www.stu.edu/lawlib/Reference/Research/Native American Law.htm
Extractions: Native American Law By Denise Gibson and Bardie Wolfe1 "If you tie a horse to a stake, do you expect that he will grow fat? If you pen an Indian up on a small spot of earth, and compel him to stay there, he will not be contented, nor will he grow and prosper. I have asked some of the great white chiefs where they get their authority to say to the Indian that he shall stay in one place, while he sees white men going where they please. They can not tell me." CHIEF JOSEPH (c. 1840-1904), Nez Perce leader, North American Review (Cedar Falls, Iowa, April 1879). I. Introduction American Indian Law is unique because Indian Tribes have a special category and relationship to the legal system. Federal law is applicable in many areas specifically affecting American Indians. States have some jurisdiction in selected issues affecting Indian Tribes and Tribes have their own code of laws. State laws affecting American Indians are part of the state statutes. Federal laws are the most predominant statutes addressing civil and criminal laws, and the jurisdictional issues affecting Indian Tribes. However, a basic problem in researching Tribal or Native American legal issues is the lack of references to Tribal cases, treaties, statutes, or regulations in traditionally published legal materials because Indian and Tribal Law has been considered a specialized area. As an example, caselaw is not included in the Florida reporters, except on applicable cases decided in the state or federal court system. However, there is now a developing and growing field of Tribal and Indian Law publications.
Native American Heritage Month of american Indian diplomacy treaties, agreements, and Proclamation, http//www.doi.gov/news/021104b NativreTech native american Technology and Art, http//www http://lib.sdstate.edu/lib11/guidemonth/natamher.html
Extractions: American Indian Heritage Month is celebrated to recognize the Intertribal Cultures of Native Americans and to enlighten individuals about their customs. The goal is to provide a platform to enhance knowledge in heritage, history, art, and tradition. ~Bureau of Indian Affairs, http://www.doi.gov/bia/ Back to top Call Number Title / Author REF American Indian quotations / compiled and edited by Howard J. Langer Atlas Area Atlas of the North American Indian / Carl Waldman ; illustrations by Molly Braun. REF Biographical dictionary of American Indian history to 1900 / Carl Waldman. REF The British Museum encyclopedia of native North America / Rayna Green with Melanie Fernandez. REF
Cofrin Library Native American Guide 1904 (5 vols.) Ref/gov Pub/US I 1. 107 (7 vols., plus a supplement). A compilationof the treaties, laws, executive orders relating to native american affairs http://www.uwgb.edu/library/guides/native.html
Extractions: Native Americans: Library Resources Return to Library Guides SCOPE This guide is an introduction to Native American resources available at the Cofrin Library and is by no means comprehensive. For the purpose of this guide, Native American, also called Amerindian Amerind , or Indian , refers to any member of the aboriginal peoples of North America. This guide has been created to assist students taking courses regarding American and Wisconsin Indians, and thus the focus is on Native Americans in the United States. This guide is available in paper and online at http://www.uwgb.edu/library/guides/native.html . With the online version you can directly connect to any sources that have an Internet address (http://....). SEARCHING THE LIBRARY CATALOG For subject search, type Indians of North America . This subject can be narrowed by adding a subheading or a geographic area. You can also do a subject search for a particular tribe (but you have to add the word Indians after the tribe name). Another option is to search by keyword, in which you do not have to match the subject heading exactly. In keyword searching you can combine words or phrases by using connecting words such as
Subject Guide--Native Americans 1979 Two volume set covering Indian treaties and agreements pages http//memory.loc.gov/ammem/omhhtml omhhome.htmlWild Apache s native american Portal Includes http://reinert.creighton.edu/pickonet/anthropo/nativeamerican.htm
Huntington Park Library: American Indian Resource Center the US Senate s ratification process of the 18 treaties negotiated with http//thomas.loc.gov/This site updates native american local legislation in http://www.colapublib.org/libs/huntingtonpark/indian.html
Extractions: E-mail: AIRC@colapl.org The American Indian Resource Center (AIRC) was established in 1979 to meet the informational, cultural and educational needs of Native Americans in Los Angeles County and to make information about them available to the larger community. The AIRC collection is the largest public library collection in the U.S. that focuses on American Indians. AIRC materials include audiocassettes, books, compact discs, films, magazines, microfilm, newsletters, newspapers, and videocassettes. Most of these materials can be checked out. The collection attempts to cover the full spectrum of American Indian experience in the continental United States - from Pre-Columbian times to the present. Subjects covered include art, architecture, bibliographies, biographies, education, fiction, history, languages, literature, government relations, federal Indian law, tribal law, tribal studies (individual tribes) and geographic area studies (e.g., California Tribes). AIRC has the only complete sets of Indian Census Records (1885 - 1940) and Records of the Indian Claims Commission (1946-1977) outside of the National Archives in Washington, D.C.