YOU WERE LOOKING FOR :Property Rights of Native Americans
Essays 271 - 300
In three pages this paper discusses the 1887 to 1934 U.S. General Allotment or Dawes Act and its impact upon Native Americans and ...
diseases such as smallpox, malaria, measles, cholera, tuberculosis, scarlet fever, whooping cough, mumps, influenza and typhoid fe...
In seven pages these novels are compared in terms of how each features the Native American identity struggle with similarities and...
In a paper consisting of fourteen pages this issue is first presented in an overview and then a thesis that the Native American re...
In five pages this paper discusses Native American suicide rates and the reasons for their high incidences. Nine sources are cite...
In five pages this paper considers the Native American responses to Anglos as depicted in the 1884 text in a discussion of whether...
In ten pages this report considers the relocation of the San Bushmen as a way of protecting this 'endangered species,' but the res...
In five pages the increased U.S. immigration and the changes upon the culture of native Americans are examined. One source is lis...
In five pages this report discusses morbidity and morality as they affect Native Americans. Four sources are cited in the bibliog...
In two pages this paper considers how European colonists attempted to eradicate the Native American culture through practices of r...
In five pages the racism that has plagued Native American society for five centuries is examined within the context of European st...
In three pages this paper traces the roots of racism in a consideration of Native American society and the 'discovery' of America ...
In six pages issues of land, leadership, and health as they pertain to Native Americans throughout the course of history are discu...
In five pages the Eastern Woodlands and the West cultures of Native Americans are examined in terms of the cultural experiences th...
A people that call themselves the Winnemen...
of the idea of adopting a Native baby than is her husband, who "grimaces briefly then smiles" (Alexie). The question arises, why w...
as being better than Native Americans in some way. The English and the American colonist neither understood Native culture nor did...
an invasion. This was not an unclaimed and unused continent. Indeed, indigenous peoples not only lived here but rightfully claim...
water for a significant percentage of these people. The dissolution of the nuclear family is another problem that should be mor...
In seven pages this paper examines Silko's novel from a historical context in an analysis of what Ceremony reveals about the latte...
In a paper that consists of five pages the ways the Spanish perceived Native Americans in Latin America and the Caribbean are exam...
is helpful to look at the traditional roots of Native American and Latino cultures. Traditionally, the women of Native American c...
a poem. It is a series of these paragraphs, each building on the previous one until the reader can form a picture of what has happ...
answered the magazines poll, who do not care. But, there are seemingly far more people who are greatly offended by such images....
past that contact to present day. By other definitions sovereignty was something that had been delegated in some way by the Unite...
kept her alive and ultimately took her home to her family who then took it upon themselves to address the violence that Brave Wolf...
contended to be even more misleading. The infatuation with Native Americans is, however, particularly obvious when one considers ...
notes, "Silko reveals that living in Laguna society as a mixed blood from a prominent family caused her a lot of pain. It meant b...
not a detriment. Consider, for example, the Mississippi Choctaw. At least one anthropologists has termed the Mississippi Choctaw...
discussed in more detail below, it represents a phenomenal improvement in the way the parental and familial rights of Native Ameri...