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Anti-Indian Movement on the Tribal Frontier

Model
Digital Document
Publisher
Center for World Indigenous Studies
Abstract
Revised edition of Occasional Paper #16 in the Fourth World Papers Program, published by the Center for World Indigenous Studies. The work provides a longitudinal analysis (1968–1991) of organizational development, ideology, tactics, and state-by-state activities of the Anti-Indian Movement, with a focus on Washington, Wisconsin, and Montana. Contents include a prologue, overview, findings, remedies, organizational histories, case studies (e.g., Washington Initiative 456, zoning jurisdiction, fishing rights), right-wing connections, and an epilogue, with references. Original print notes indicate copyright reserved by the publisher and availability as a low-cost pamphlet. The source text evidences OCR artifacts and typographical noise but preserves substantive content including organizational names, dates, and section headings.

Establishing Intergovernmental Cooperation on Tribal Judicial Systems

Model
Document
Publisher
The Bancroft Library, University of California, Berkeley
Description
Collection guide for BANC MSS 2010/185. Physical extent: 30 linear feet (19 cartons, 2 boxes, 1 volume, 21 oversize folders, and 1 roll). Languages noted in the collection: English, Spanish, and Miskito; the finding aid text is in English. Access: Most materials open for research; Volume 1 contains restricted personal information and is closed until 2057. Acquisition: Gift to The Bancroft Library in 2010 by Brian Weiss, Executor of the Estate of Angelina Nietschmann. Arrangement: Ten series, including Correspondence; Writings; Research Data, Field Notebooks, and Subject Files; Maya Mapping Project; Research Proposals and Professional Projects; Course Materials; UC Berkeley Administrative Materials; Personalia and Biographical Material; Drawings, Maps, and Posters; and Audiovisual Materials. Related materials include photographs (BANC PIC 2011.015). Publication/permission inquiries via The Bancroft Library.

The World Bank's New Indigenous Policy: A Change in International Economic Development Strategies

Model
Document
Description
An essay reviewing the World Bank's first comprehensive policy on tribal peoples (1982), with background on the Bank's governance, lending practices, and links to international financial systems. It details the policy's goals, operational procedures, and potential outcomes, and discusses risks of assimilation versus Indigenous leverage in project contexts. Includes a bibliography of contemporaneous sources.