1982
DOI: 10.2307/1183652
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Indians, Bureaucrats, and Land: The Dawes Act and the Decline of Indian Farming

Abstract: * and his low political profile, all contributed to a few years of prosperity. But whether into any general theories of Southern History; nor are its central charac-Indians, Bureaucrats, and Land: The Dawes Act and the Decline of Indian. Farming. By Leonard A. Carlson. (Contributions in Economics and. Economic History, 36.) Ground Not Given Social Text Duke University Press tant contribution to our understanding of the war years and of. cline of Indian Farming by LEONARD A. CARLSON. Westport, In Indian history… Show more

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“…United States Federal Indian Law further dispossessed many Indigenous peoples of their lands and natural resources, forcibly acquiring lands and often removing Indigenous inhabitants to completely different North American regions (Cronin and Ostergren 2007). Compounding their removal from traditional homelands, Indigenous peoples of the United States suffered increased land loss and land‐holding fragmentation on reservations during the Allotment Era because of the abuse and manipulation of land sales (Carlson 1981, Banner 2005, Otis 2014). Predictably, these colonial philosophies towards Indigenous peoples underlaid the foundation and management applications for many disciplines, including wildlife management (Yarbrough 2015).…”
Section: State Of Tek Within Wildlife Managementmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…United States Federal Indian Law further dispossessed many Indigenous peoples of their lands and natural resources, forcibly acquiring lands and often removing Indigenous inhabitants to completely different North American regions (Cronin and Ostergren 2007). Compounding their removal from traditional homelands, Indigenous peoples of the United States suffered increased land loss and land‐holding fragmentation on reservations during the Allotment Era because of the abuse and manipulation of land sales (Carlson 1981, Banner 2005, Otis 2014). Predictably, these colonial philosophies towards Indigenous peoples underlaid the foundation and management applications for many disciplines, including wildlife management (Yarbrough 2015).…”
Section: State Of Tek Within Wildlife Managementmentioning
confidence: 99%