Chapter 3 Tribal government
It gives specific state governments jurisdiction over offenses committed by or against Indian on tribal lands within those specific states.
Public law 280
This act granted citizenship to hundreds of thousands of Native Americans.
Synder act
The inherent right of a tribe to govern themselves.
Tribal sovereignty
The primary federal agency in charge of carrying out the United States' trust responsibility to Native Americans.
Bureau of Indian Affairs (BIA)
What act ended the United States recognition of additional Native American tribes as independent nations and prohibited additional treaties from being made with the tribes?
Indian Appropriations Act
When a weaker nation accepts protection from a stronger nation but does not lose sovereignty it is called
a protectorate
The guardianship relationship started when the United States changed its Indian policy from maintained separation to
assimilation
When a minority group gradually adopts the customs and attitudes of the prevailing culture it is called
assimilation
The condition of being independent and having the right of self-governance is called
autonomy
The combined legal postions of the indigenous tribes in the United States has created a ________________ relationship between tribal nations and the federal government.
complex
The Bureau of Indian Affairs was administratively established in 1824 by Secretary of War John Calhoun within what department?
department of war
When a tribe possess internal governmental power over all affairs within the tribe, but lacks external authorities to engage in relationships with foreign nations is called
domestic dependent nation.
The status of a person who is a legal citizen of two or more sovereignty.
dual citizenship.
Tribes or groups of people that are original to a specific geographical area are called
indigenous tribes
A treaty between the federal government and an Native American tribe ___________ a piece of state legislation.
is supreme over
What act gave all people born on United States soil citizenship?
nationality act
Indian tribes possess inherent sovereignty. States governments are
not inherently sovereign
In 1935 the Supreme Court ruled that the federal government could not take Indian lands without doing what for the tribes?
paying the tribes just compensation
Complete power over a particular area with no limitations is called
plenary power
What act broke up tribal lands and distributed that land to Indian families in an effort to assimilate Native Americans?
the Dawes act
There are three specific mentions of the relationship between the United States and Native American tribes in what?
the constitution
What court provides a venue for prosecuting criminal cases on Native American reservations?
the court of Indian offences
What principle of United States Indian law states that the federal government has a duty to protect the tribes, tribal lands and resources,provide social services and preserve tribal autonomy?
trust Relationship
Benefits provided by the federal government to a certain group but not to all citizens is called
trust relationship
During the guardianship period the relationship between the federal government and the Indian tribes seemed to give the federal government_____________ power over the tribes.
unlimited