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Projects

American Indian Community Data Profile, 2002

Namadji Youth and Elders Project Report, 2001

Forum Reports
1997 Fall: Tribal Sovereignty and American Indian Leadership

1996 Fall: Tribal Governments: What will they look like in the year 2010?

1996 Spring: The Threatened State of Tribal Sovereignty

1995 Fall: American Indian Elders

1995 Spring: Tribal Sovereignty

Indians must face new wave of threats to sovereignty together

by John Poupart, President

A cornerstone of American Indian political legal definition, tribal sovereignty, continues to face threats from many quarters. It should surprise no one familiar with Indian Country that attacks on Indians continue. Throughout history, Indians are familiar with these kinds of actions. It seems Indians have always faced challenging and threatening conditions. It is simply time to recognize another wave is here.

In the past, Indians faced environmental challenges like hunger, disease and a general lack of life-giving resources. These kinds of challenges were to be expected, but then other types of challenges arose. These included issues that Indians were not familiar with, like lumber, mining, railroads, land speculation, fur trade, buffalo hunting, military, missionaries, relocation and termination. Now, the new challenges come in the form of unfavorable court decisions, hostile state governments and congressional actions.

The American Indian Research and Policy Institute is in a key position to help American Indians engage the newest and latest challenges. This report outlines a beginning strategy involving steps to be taken to counter these threats. A common front among American Indian tribes must be established. The development of this strategy began on May 30 and 31, 1996, when we sponsored a public forum. The purpose of this report, in the narrowest definition, is to describe the events of the forum when more than 150 people sat down to discuss "The Threatened State of Tribal Sovereignty." This forum was the first in a series of discussions that will be held throughout Minnesota, South Dakota, North Dakota and Montana.

Interestingly, 11 tribes in Wisconsin recently banded together forming a coalition to build economic strengths and to join forces on political issues. The American Indian Research and Policy Institute will sponsor forums for Indians to express their ideas. Ultimately, these ideas will be shared with other Indian tribes to shape a collective such as the one in Wisconsin. Our staff will serve as the information catalyst bringing tribes together to discuss their views. The tribes could conceivably form an agenda synthesizing their resources to arrive at a common voice for handling unfavorable court decisions, congressional actions and state government initiatives negatively affecting their sovereign status.

In a closer examination of recent initiatives taken by certain members of the U.S. Congress, it is clear that a level of ignorance exists about the historical, political and legal status of American Indians. But what can one expect when facts and reality about American Indians have been historically missing in school curriculum? An education system lacking a fair and balanced curriculum about American Indians results in most Americans possessing little or no knowledge about them, including U.S. Congressional Representatives. Left unchecked, this benign ignorance results in federal devolution practices that place federal trust responsibility in the hands of the various states, which have no jurisdiction over these affairs. This is extremely challenging and much more than a fundamental policy shift in the historic government to government relationship between Indian tribes and the U.S. Congress. It portends devastating results for American Indians.

It is the goal of the American Research and Policy Institute to initiate dialogue and promote ideas for addressing American Indian policy concerns in the twenty-first century. To achieve that end, we need active participation of American Indian tribal leadership and their constituents. The Institute also needs to provide constant information feedback to Indian participants so that the integrity of the project is intact.

Indians have always dealt with adverse issues in their own way. That they have survived gives us cause to think about how they did it. It wasn't just the leadership of the tribe that brought them through. It was all Indians working together toward a common mission.

A call to action is essential. American Indians need to find a posture of recovery and reassert themselves. What held us together in the past must be found for use in the future. If we can identify what that is and use it in combination with new technical skills, we might have a chance. This new introspection can have bountiful returns. We can create new and broad coalitions of American Indian tribes starting in North Dakota, Minnesota, South Dakota and Montana. This coalition could begin to shape a national Indian agenda for sound, rational Indian policy. This coalition could begin to tell policy makers in Washington, D.C. and elsewhere how to shape policy for American Indians. It's a good place to start.


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Last updated: Tuesday November 1, 2005