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Hada, Kenneth – American Indian Culture and Research Journal, 2009
Diane Glancy's historical fiction, "Pushing the Bear", reconstructs one episode in the Cherokee Trails of Tears (there were actually several relocations to the west, for the Cherokee and the other eastern tribes of the same period). The Removal of eastern peoples from their ancestral lands westward to eventual resettlement in Oklahoma is…
Descriptors: Novels, United States History, American Indian History, Relocation
Hippler, Arthur E. – 1970
The report discusses socialization as related to the movement of Alaska natives from small villages to larger villages and finally to Alaska's urban centers. The study, which was limited to the village milieu of Northwest Alaska Eskimo communities, points out that a type of quasi-urban acculturation is brought about by the natives' increased…
Descriptors: Acculturation, American Indians, Attitudes, Community
Peer reviewedKerri, James Nwannukwu – Human Organization, 1976
Descriptors: Adjustment (to Environment), American Indians, Migration, Nature Nurture Controversy
Peer reviewedForbes, Jack – Wicazo Sa Review, 1986
The Wapanakamikok, or Eastern Land People, have been forced to do a great deal of moving about since the beginning of European contact in 1607. The Lenape dialect of their common language is spoken today primarily in Oklahoma and Canada and descendents of Wapanakamikok groups are scattered in Wisconsin and Kansas as well. (The other two dialect…
Descriptors: American Indian History, American Indian Languages, American Indians, Anthropological Linguistics
Harkins, Arthur M.; Woods, Richard G. – 1970
As part of the National Study of American Indian Education, this interim report is one of several which deal with the approximately 4000 Indians of St. Paul, Minnesota, where 3 major tribal groups (Chippewa, Sioux, and Winnebago) are concentrated in 3 areas of the city. Efforts to develop social organizations with Indian leadership in order to…
Descriptors: Adjustment (to Environment), Agency Role, American Indians, Attitudes
Peer reviewedAblon, Joan – Human Organization, 1964
American Indians who come to the San Francisco Bay Area choose to associate primarily with other Indians of their own or differing tribes in both informal and formal social interaction. Urbanization of Indians occurs on a large scale because of government relocation programs; however, the background in small rural folk communities creates a…
Descriptors: Acculturation, American Indians, Attitudes, Ethnic Grouping
Weibel, Joan – 1976
Urban adaptation patterns of male and female American Indians were investigated via comparison of premigration statistics (48 Navajo and 40 Oklahoma families) with postmigration statistics on a sample of 23 Navajo and 21 Oklahoma families now living in Los Angeles. The premigration variables were residence patterns; population density;…
Descriptors: Academic Achievement, Adjustment (to Environment), Age, American Indians

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