• Medientyp: Buch
  • Titel: "Retained by the people" : a history of American Indians and the Bill of Rights
  • Enthält: 1. Concepts of rights -- 2. The old and new colonialism -- 3. Legal survival, human survival -- 4. Native Americans and constitutionalism -- 5. Dualities of Indian law -- 6. A cancer within -- 7. The Indian Bill of Rights -- 8. Modern tribalism -- 9. Rights in retreat -- 10. Epilogue.
  • Beteiligte: Wunder, John R. [VerfasserIn]
  • Erschienen: New York, NY [u.a.]: Oxford Univ. Press, 1994
  • Erschienen in: Bicentennial essays on the Bill of Rights
  • Umfang: XIV, 278 S.; Ill; 22 cm
  • Sprache: Englisch
  • ISBN: 0195055624; 0195055632
  • RVK-Notation: NT 7300 : Nordamerika (USA, Kanada)
  • Schlagwörter: USA > Indianer > Geschichte 1491-1991
    Nordamerika > Indianer > Geschichte 1491-1991
    Nordamerika > Indianer > Geschichte 1491-1991
    USA > Geschichte
    Indianer > USA
  • Entstehung:
  • Anmerkungen: Includes bibliographical references (p. 215 - 249) and index
  • Beschreibung: This vivid chronicle is the first in-depth, comprehensive history of the relationship between American Indians and the Bill of Rights, tracing developments and issues from 1491 to the present

    After providing a thorough examination of rights and legal status as perceived by Native Americans, addressing such topics as conduct and collective rights, "Retained by The People" recounts the various brutal forms of colonialism forced upon indigenous nations by European and American settlers through the beginning of 1900, then gives a balanced and detailed analysis of twentieth-century events that have shaped Native American rights under the United States constitution. The author explores attacks on Indian culture in the 1920s, the empowerment of tribal governments during the thirties, and federal attempts at cultural liquidation through the forties, fifties, and sixties

    With the first detailed assessment of the 1968 Indian Bill of Rights and a complete narrative of Native American efforts toward achieving limited sovereignty and unlimited rights over the past three decades, "Retained by The People" will be vital to anyone interested in Native American history or U.S. constitutional law

    This vivid chronicle is the first in-depth, comprehensive history of the relationship between American Indians and the Bill of Rights, tracing developments and issues from 1491 to the present

    After providing a thorough examination of rights and legal status as perceived by Native Americans, addressing such topics as conduct and collective rights, "Retained by The People" recounts the various brutal forms of colonialism forced upon indigenous nations by European and American settlers through the beginning of 1900, then gives a balanced and detailed analysis of twentieth-century events that have shaped Native American rights under the United States constitution. The author explores attacks on Indian culture in the 1920s, the empowerment of tribal governments during the thirties, and federal attempts at cultural liquidation through the forties, fifties, and sixties

    With the first detailed assessment of the 1968 Indian Bill of Rights and a complete narrative of Native American efforts toward achieving limited sovereignty and unlimited rights over the past three decades, "Retained by The People" will be vital to anyone interested in Native American history or U.S. constitutional law

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