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Native Agency: Indians in the Bureau of Indian Affairs

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What happens when American Indians take over an institution designed to eliminate them?

 

The Bureau of Indian Affairs was hatched in the U.S. Department of War to subjugate and eliminate American Indians. Yet beginning in the 1970s, American Indians and Alaska Natives took over and now run the agency. Choctaw anthropologist Valerie Lambert argues that, instead of fulfilling settler-colonial goals, the Indians in the BIA have been leveraging federal power to fight settler colonialism, battle white supremacy, and serve the interests of their people. 

Although the missteps and occasional blunders of the Indians in the BIA have at times damaged the federal-Indian relationship and fueled the ire of their people, and although the BIA is massively underfunded, Indians began crafting the BIA into a Native agency by reformulating the meanings of concepts that lay at its heart—concepts such as tribal sovereignty, treaties, the trust responsibility, and Indian land. At the same time, they pursued actions to strengthen and bolster tribes, to foster healing, to fight the many injustices Indians face, and to restore the Indian land base.

This work provides an essential national-level look at an intriguing and impactful form of Indigenous resistance. It describes, in great detail, the continuing assaults made on Native peoples and tribal sovereignty in the United States during the twenty-first century, and it sketches the visions of the future that Indians at the BIA and in Indian Country have been crafting for themselves.

ISBN-13: 9781517914530

Media Type: Paperback

Publisher: University of Minnesota Press

Publication Date: 01-03-2023

Pages: 344

Product Dimensions: 5.50(w) x 8.50(h) x 1.02(d)

Series: Indigenous Americas

Valerie Lambert is associate professor of anthropology at the University of North Carolina- Chapel Hill. An enrolled citizen of the Choctaw Nation, she is author of Choctaw Nation: A Story of American Indian Resurgence, winner of the 2007 North American Indian Prose Award.

Table of Contents

Acknowledgments ix

Acronyms xix

Time Line xxi

Introduction: The Native Agency 1

1 The History of the BIA: From the Department of War to the Second Indian Take-over 35

2 Indigenous Perspectives: A New Paradigm for Federal-Indian Relations 63

3 Indians at the Top: Powered by Conviction, Vision, and Grit 105

4 Upper-Level Officials: Fighting for Justice for Indian People 139

5 The Resolute Rank and File: Implementing an Indian Agenda 183

6 The Indian Employees in Field Operations: Navigating Indian Country from All Directions 221

Conclusion: Leveraging Federal Power and Advancing Indian Interests 257

Notes 271

Bibliography 313

Index 329