Uncivil rights: The abuse of tribal sovereignty and the termination of American Indian tribal citizenship
Title
Uncivil rights: The abuse of tribal sovereignty and the termination of American Indian tribal citizenship
Description
Starting in the 1990s, an increasing number of Indigenous people have been removed from tribal rolls, denying them basic citizenship rights, including due process, private property rights, jobs, voting rights, and the like. Popularly known as disenrollment, these individual and family terminations have increased in number and frequency as casino tribes have increased their wealth, and federal courts have decided not to hear cases on individual civil rights violations pertaining to Indigenous peoples. Indians are supposed to be protected from their tribal governments by the Indian Civil Rights Act of 1968, but it is not enforced by many tribal councils, courts, or federal agencies. This paper analyzes the contributing factors to disenrollment, such as casino gaming and past federal termination policy, along with quantitative data on the numbers of Indians disenrolled from their tribes. Of the 80 or so tribes contained within the borders of the US that have disenrolled substantial portions of their citizenry, 24 of those are located in California. The question is whether there are commonalities to the cases involved in these purges, or if it is simply a matter of bad behavior on the part of some that is emulated by others.
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Citation Info
Hansen, K. N. (2020). Uncivil rights: The abuse of tribal sovereignty and the termination of American Indian tribal citizenship. IAFOR Journal of Cultural Studies, 5(1), 49–63. https://doi.org/10.22492/ijcs.5.1.03
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“Uncivil rights: The abuse of tribal sovereignty and the termination of American Indian tribal citizenship,” Outstanding Faculty Publications, accessed November 22, 2024, https://facpub.library.fresnostate.edu/items/show/203.