| |
Category: 17.5. Efforts to obtain federal recognition
BROW002. Brown, Cynthia. The vanished
Native Americans: unrecognized tribes. Nation 257:11
(1 October 1993): 384, 386-388, 391. 2,647 words.
Publication type: Magazine article
Electronic access: LEXIS-NEXIS Academic Universe; also
EBSCOhost Masterfile Premier (NCLIVE)
The article was spurred by Adrian Andrade's question
to President Clinton, during his televised talk with American children
in 1993, about Lumbee lack of federal recognition. Notes that although
over 500 tribes are recognized by the Bureau of Indian affairs, over 100,
scattered among 30 states and comprising 80,000 to 100,000 people, are
petitioning for recognition. BIA recognition would give these tribes
some startup funds; funds (based on tribal needs) for education, health,
and housing; and control of any natural resources located on tribal property.
Fewer that half of petitions submitted to the BIA have been approved since
the petition process began in 1978.
Discusses the Indian Reorganization Act of 1934, then
describes Congressional termination of numerous tribes in the 1950s
and 1960s. Explains that the federal acknowledgment guidelines
are too burdensome for most petitioning tribes to follow. The
tribes routinely seek federal grants for experts to help them research,
write, and file their petition. It may then take several years
before they receive an initial response from the BIA, then more time
for the tribe to remedy parts of the petition that the BIA identified
as obvious deficiencies, and still longer before they receive
a final ruling from the BIA. The author notes that (at the time
of this article) since 1978, only 23 petitions had been completely resolved.
Notes that the Lumbee are the most controversial of all
petitioning tribes, since there are 40,000 tribal members. Most tribes
asking for federal recognition are smaller (500-1000; the Miamis of Indiana,
with 4,500 members, were considered large). The Lumbee petition,
filed in 1987, took eight years and over $500,000 to prepare. The
article then reviews administrative and political obstacles to Lumbee recognition.
Additional Subjects: Lumbee Petition (1987)
| Bureau of Indian Affairs
This annotation was edited on: June 17, 2002
Home Page URL: lumbeebibliography.net |
|