Cover image for Reclaiming the reservation : histories of Indian sovereignty suppressed and renewed
Reclaiming the reservation : histories of Indian sovereignty suppressed and renewed
Title:
Reclaiming the reservation : histories of Indian sovereignty suppressed and renewed
Author:
Harmon, Alexandra, 1945- author.
ISBN:
9780295745862

9780295745855
Physical Description:
viii, 410 pages : illustrations, maps ; 23 cm
Series:
Emil and Kathleen Sick lecture-book series in western history and biography

Emil and Kathleen Sick lecture-book series in western history and biography.
Contents:
Introduction -- 1. Facts are tough -- 2. Promises of power -- 3. Colonial controls in Quinault territory -- 4. "Arising" in the sixties -- 5. Lawyers on the scene -- 6. Colonial controls in Suquamish territory -- 7. Encouraging signs -- 8. Telling stories in court -- 9. Obstacles, options, and opportunities.
Abstract:
"In the landmark 1978 case Oliphant v. Suquamish, the Supreme Court ruled that no Indian tribe can lawfully prosecute non-Indians. This decision had far-reaching effects in subsequent disputes about the jurisdiction of American Indian tribes, the terms of their relationship to the United States, their powers as political entities, and the significance of Indian reservations. Yet, even though few developments have highlighted the tensions, hopes, and fears associated with American Indians' unique political-legal status as clearly as contemporary tribal governments' assertion of jurisdiction over non-Indians, that subject hasn't received the attention it deserves from historians. The Non-Indian Problem recounts the history of tribes' desire for inclusive jurisdiction and the circumstances that encouraged them finally to act on that desire in the twentieth century. The manuscript focuses on the legal battles of the Quinault and Suquamish tribes beginning in the 1960s and culminating in the 1978 decision, with an epilogue addressing the consequences of that ruling"-- Provided by publisher.