Title
Indian Self Rule: FirstHand Accounts Of IndianWhite Relations From Roosevelt To Reagan,New
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Indian SelfRule is a record of the rarest of occasions, for never before have so many individuals who played an important role in Indianwhite relations had the chance to meet and exchange views. The contributors include Indian leaders and activists from a wide crosssection of America's varied native communities; government officials who formulated and administered federal policy, often receiving the blame, rightly or wrongly, when things went wrong; lawyers and other professionals who represent and serve native Americans in courtrooms, corporate offices, and elsewhere; and scholars historians, anthropologists, political scientists, and others who study Indians and Indian issues, usually from relatively remote university corridors. Their purpose was to review the fifty years of Indian history since the Indian Reorganization Act was passed during Franklin Delano Roosevelt's New Deal administration. That legislation sought to recast federal Indian policy, redirecting it away from dictatorial assimilation policies toward more selfgovernment for Indians and new respect for their cultural heritage. Other important changes and events have occurred in the subsequent fifty years, including a tribal termination policy, a resurgence of Indian activism, millions of dollars in Indian claims settlements, and the assertion of tribal control over vast energyrich resources. The common theme that has run through them all has been Indians' struggle for greater control over their own lives and affairs. The result has been a fitful, uneven progression toward selfdetermination and selfrule, conditions other Americans take for granted.
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