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{{Short description|none}}
] dancers at the ] Art Museum, 2006]]
] members of the Caddo Cultural Club, ], 2008]] ] dancers at the ] Art Museum, 2006]]
] members of the Caddo Cultural Club, ], 2008]]
] (Iowa), ] (Tongva-Acjachemen) and Reid Gómez (Navajo)]]
'''Native American identity in the United States''' is an evolving topic based on the struggle to define "]" or "(American) Indian" both for people who consider themselves Native American and for people who do not. Some people seek an ] that will provide for a stable definition for legal, social, and personal purposes. There are a number of different factors which have been used to define "Indianness," and the source and potential use of the definition play a role in what definition is used. Facets which characterize "Indianness" include ], ], ]/], ], and ].<ref>Garroutte (2003), Paredes (1995)</ref> An important question is whether the definition should be dynamic and changeable across time and situation, or whether it is possible to define "Indianness" in a static way.<ref name="Peroff 1997 p487">Peroff (1997) p487</ref> The dynamic definitions may be based in how Indians adapt and adjust to dominant society, which may be called an "oppositional process" by which the boundaries between Indians and the dominant groups are maintained. Another reason for dynamic definitions is the process of "]", which is the process by which the ethnic identity of the group is developed and renewed as social organizations and cultures evolve.<ref name="Peroff 1997 p487"/> The question of identity, especially ] identity, is common in many societies worldwide.<ref name="Peroff 1997 p487"/>


'''Native American identity in the United States''' is a community identity, determined by the tribal nation the individual or group belongs to.<ref name=TallBear1>{{cite journal|author=Kimberly TallBear |authorlink=Kim TallBear|title=DNA, Blood, and Racializing the Tribe|journal=Wíčazo Ša Review|date= 2003 |volume=18 |issue=1 |pages=81–107 |publisher=University of Minnesota Press |jstor=140943|doi=10.1353/wic.2003.0008|s2cid=201778441 }}</ref><ref name="nhpr">{{cite news |last1=Furukawa |first1=Julia |title=Review of genealogies, other records fails to support local leaders' claims of Abenaki ancestry |url=https://www.nhpr.org/nh-news/2023-05-22/review-of-genealogies-other-records-fails-to-support-local-leaders-claims-of-abenaki-ancestry |access-date=7 July 2023 |work=New Hampshire Public Radio |date=May 22, 2023}}</ref> While it is common for non-Natives to consider it a racial or ethnic identity, for ] it is considered a political identity, based on citizenship and immediate family relationships.<ref name=TallBear1/><ref name="nhpr"/> As culture can vary widely between the 574 extant ], the idea of a single unified "Native American" racial identity is a European construct that does not have an equivalent in tribal thought.<ref name=TallBear1/>
The future of their identity is extremely important to ]s. Activist ] bemoans the crumbling Indian way of life, the loss of traditions, languages, and sacred places. He remarks that there may soon be no more Native Americans, only "Native American Americans, like ]s and ]s." As the number of Indians has grown (ten times as many today as in 1890), the number who carry on tribal traditions shrinks (one fifth as many as in 1890), as has been common among many ethnic groups over time. Means says, "We might speak our language, we might look like Indians and sound like Indians, but we won’t be Indians."<ref>Peroff (1997) p492</ref>


While some groups and individuals ] as Native American, self-identification on its own does not make one eligible for membership among recognized tribes.<ref name=TallBear1/><ref name="RussellClaim"/><ref name="nhpr"/> There are a number of different factors which have been used by non-Natives to define "Indianness," and the source and potential use of the definition play a role in what definitions have been used in their writings, including culture, society, genes/biology, law, and ].<ref>Garroutte (2003), Paredes (1995)</ref> Peroff asks whether the definition should be dynamic and changeable across time and situation, or whether it is possible to define "Indianness" in a static way,<ref name="Peroff 1997 p487">Peroff (1997) p487</ref> based in how Indians adapt and adjust to dominant society, which may be called an "oppositional process" by which the boundaries between Indians and the dominant groups are maintained. Another reason for dynamic definitions is the process of "]", which is the process by which the ethnic identity of the group is developed and renewed as social organizations and cultures evolve.<ref name="Peroff 1997 p487"/> The question of identity, especially ] identity, is common in many societies worldwide.<ref name="Peroff 1997 p487"/>
==Definitions==
There are various ways in which Indian identity has been defined. Some definitions seek universal applicability, while others only seek definitions for particular purposes, such as for tribal membership or for the purposes of legal jurisdiction.<ref>Bowen (2000)</ref> The individual seeks to have a personal identity that matches social and legal definitions, although perhaps any definition will fail to categorize correctly the identity of everyone.<ref>Garroutte (2003)</ref>


==Factors and terminology==
American Indians were perhaps clearly identifiable at the turn of the 20th century, but today the concept is contested. Malcolm Margolin, co-editor of ''News From Native California'' muses, "I don’t know what an Indian is... Some people are clearly Indian, and some are clearly not."<ref>Peroff (1997) p489 quoting Fost (1991) p. 28</ref> Cherokee Chief (from 1985–1995) Wilma Mankiller echoes: "An Indian is an Indian regardless of the degree of Indian blood or which little government card they do or do not possess."<ref>Sheffield p107-108 quoted from Hales 1990b: 3A - Hales, Donna. 1990a "Tribe Touts Unregistered Artists", Muskogee (Okla.) ''Daily Phoenix'', Septmnber 3, 1990 1A 10A</ref>
{{main|Native Americans in the United States|Native American name controversy}}


Preferred terminology for ], ], or ] as a whole varies regionally, as well as by age and other sociological factors. Most individuals prefer to be known as citizens or descendants of the exact tribes/nations they are from. As for general, overarching terms, the ] defines ''Native American'' as "all people indigenous{{sic}} to the United States and its territories—including ] and Other ]—whose data are published separately from American Indians and Alaska Natives".<ref name=uscb>{{cite web |title=U.S. Census Bureau History: American Indians and Alaska Natives |url=https://www.census.gov/history/www/homepage_archive/2021/november_2021.html |website=U.S. Census Bureau |access-date=30 July 2023}}</ref>
Further, it is difficult to know what might be meant by any Native American ''racial'' identity. Race is a disputed term, but is often said to be a social (or political) rather than biological construct. The issue of Native American racial identity is discussed in Russell (2002, p68), "American Indians have always had the theoretical option of removing themselves from a tribal community and becoming legally white. American law has made it easy for Indians to disappear because that disappearance has always been necessary to the ']' that the United States span the continent that was, after all, occupied." Russell contrasts this with the reminder that Native Americans are "members of communities before members of a race."<ref>Russell (2002) p68 is quoting López (1994) p55</ref>


The use of ''Native American'' or ''native American'' to refer to Indigenous peoples who live in the Americas came into widespread, common use during the ] of the 1960s and 1970s. This term was considered to represent historical fact more accurately (i.e., "Native" cultures predated European colonization). In addition, activists also believed it was free of negative historical connotations that had come to be associated with previous terms. However, not all Native people accepted the change. In 1968, the ] (AIM) was founded in the United States. In 1977, a delegation from the ], an arm of AIM, elected to collectively identify as "American Indian", at the United Nations ] in ], Switzerland.{{citation needed|date=December 2024}}
===Traditional===
]s and log cabins.]]
Traditional definitions of "Indianness" are also important. There is a sense of "peoplehood" which links Indianness to sacred traditions, places, and shared history as indigenous people.<ref name="Peroff 1997 p487"/> This definition transcends academic and legal terminology.<ref name="Peroff 1997 p487"/> Language is also seen as an important part of identity, and learning ], especially for youth in a community, is an important part in tribal survival.<ref>Etheridge (2007)</ref>


Some Indigenous activists and public figures, particularly those from the ], such as ] (]), have preferred "Indian" to the more recently adopted "Native American".<ref>{{cite news |url=http://oser.state.wi.us/pgsub_detail.asp?linksubcat2id=639&linksubcatid=1023&linkcatid=352&linkid= |title=Indian Eristic |date=January 5, 2007 |access-date=2007-10-17 |publisher=Wisconsin Office of State Employment Relations }}{{dead link|date=February 2018 |bot=InternetArchiveBot |fix-attempted=yes }}</ref><ref name="McClinton-TempleVelie2010">{{cite book|author1=Jennifer McClinton-Temple|author2=Alan Velie|title=Encyclopedia of American Indian Literature|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=_HeSvlkGFl4C&pg=PR12|date=12 May 2010|publisher=Infobase Publishing|isbn=978-1-4381-2087-4|page=12}}</ref> Means spoke frequently of his fear of the loss of traditions, languages, and sacred places. He was concerned that there may soon be no more Native Americans, only "Native American Americans, like ]s and ]s." As the number of self-reported "Indians" has grown (ten times as many today as in 1890), the number who carry on tribal traditions has reportedly shrunk (one fifth as many as in 1890), as has been common among many cultural groups over time. Means said, "We might speak our language, we might look like Indians and sound like Indians, but we won’t be Indians."<ref>Peroff (1997) p492</ref>
Some Indian artists find traditional definitions especially important. ] poet ] offers his own definition, "An Indian is one who offers tobacco to the ground, feeds the water, and prays to the four winds in his own language." Pulitzer Prize-winning ] author ] gives a definition that is less spiritual but still based in the traditions and experience of a person and their family, "An Indian is someone who thinks of themselves as an Indian. But that's not so easy to do and one has to earn the entitlement somehow. You have to have a certain experience of the world in order to formulate this idea. I consider myself an Indian; I've had the experience of an Indian. I know how my father saw the world, and his father before him."<ref>Bordewich (1996) p67</ref>


Between 1982 and 1993, most American ] came to agree that "color terms" referring to ethnic groups, such as Black, should be capitalized as proper names, as well as ''Native American''.<ref>{{cite journal |last=Wachal |first=Robert S. |title=The Capitalization of Black and Native American |journal=American Speech |volume=75 |issue=4 |pages=364–65 |date=Winter 2000 |doi=10.1215/00031283-75-4-364 |s2cid=143199364 |url=http://americanspeech.dukejournals.org/content/75/4/364.full.pdf+html}} {{subscription required}}</ref> By 2020, "Indigenous" was also included in these capitalization guidelines.<ref name=APIndigenous>{{cite news |url=https://apnews.com/article/race-and-ethnicity-us-news-business-ap-top-news-racial-injustice-71386b46dbff8190e71493a763e8f45a |title=AP changes writing style to capitalize "b" in Black |date=June 19, 2020 |work=The Associated Press |access-date=August 9, 2023|quote=The news organization will also now capitalize Indigenous in reference to original inhabitants of a place.}}</ref><ref name=ChicagoIndigenous>{{cite web |url=https://www.chicagomanualofstyle.org/qanda/data/faq/topics/Capitalization/faq0106.html|title=FAQ: Capitalization |work=The Chicago Manual of Style |access-date=August 9, 2023|quote='We would capitalize “Indigenous” in both contexts: that of Indigenous people and groups, on the one hand, and Indigenous culture and society, on the other. Lowercase “indigenous” would be reserved for contexts in which the term does not apply to Indigenous people in any sense—for example, indigenous plant and animal species.'
=== Constructed as an imagined community ===
}}</ref>
Some social scientists relate the uncertainty of Native American identity to the theory of the constructed nature of identity. Many social scientists discuss the construction of identity. ]'s "]" are an example. However, some see construction of identity as being part of how a group remembers its past, tells its stories, and interprets its ]. Thus ] is made within the discourses of history and culture. Identity thus may not be a fact based in the essence of a person, but a positioning, based in politics and social situations.<ref>Hall (1997) p53</ref>

During the late 20th century the term "Indigenous peoples" evolved into a political term that refers to ethnic groups with historical ties to groups that existed in a territory prior to ] or formation of a ]. The "I" is capitalized as it refers to a group of people.<ref>{{Cite web|title=Associated Press Stylebook|url=https://www.apstylebook.com/race-related-coverage|access-date=2021-07-04|website=www.apstylebook.com|archive-date=2021-08-16|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20210816190545/https://www.apstylebook.com/race-related-coverage|url-status=dead}}</ref> In the Americas, the term "Indigenous peoples of the Americas" was adopted, and the term is tailored to specific geographic or political regions, such as "]". "'Indigenous peoples' ... is a term that internationalizes the experiences, the issues and the struggles of some of the world's colonized peoples", writes ] educator ]. "The final 's' in 'Indigenous peoples' ... a way of recognizing that there are real differences between different Indigenous peoples."<ref name=Smith7>{{cite book |last=Smith |first=Linda Tuhiwai |author-link=Linda Tuhiwai Smith |title=Decolonizing Methodologies: Research and Indigenous Peoples |place=London |publisher=Zed Books |year=1999 |isbn=978-1-85649-624-7 |url-access=registration |url=https://archive.org/details/decolonizingmeth0000smit|page=7}}</ref> Many younger Native Americans now prefer "Indigenous" as a unifying term, over previous options.{{citation needed|date=December 2024}}

===Blood quantum or lineal descent===
{{main|Blood quantum laws}}
Some tribes have a blood quantum requirement for citizenship. Others use other methods, such as ]. While almost two-thirds of all federally recognized Indian tribes in the United States require a certain blood quantum for citizenship,<ref>Garroutte (2003) p16</ref> tribal nations are ], with a government to government relationship with the United States, and set their own enrollment criteria. The ] of 1934 used three criteria: tribal membership, ancestral descent, and blood quantum (one half).

===Traditional===
]s and log cabins.]]
While traditional definitions of Native American identity can vary between Native communities, such definitions usually refer to those who observe, preserve, and teach about the community's ancestral language, culture and ceremonies,<ref name="Etheridge 2007">Etheridge (2007)</ref> and who protect and maintain the community's sacred sites and inherited landbase.<ref name="Peroff 1997 p487"/> The term is defined by Indigenous cultural standards, rather than mainstream academic and legal terminology.<ref name="Peroff 1997 p487"/> Language preservation in particular, and doing one's part to preserve the ] of one's community, especially for young people, is seen as contributing to cultural survival, and is an important part of being "traditional".<ref name="Etheridge 2007"/> Those who maintain Native American traditions are often referred to as "traditional" or "traditionals".<ref name="Peroff 1997 p487"/>


Some Indian artists find traditional definitions especially important. ] poet ] offers his own definition, "An Indian is one who offers tobacco to the ground, feeds the water, and prays to the four winds in his own language." Pulitzer Prize-winning ] author ] gives a definition that is less spiritual but still based in the traditions and experience of a person and their family, "An Indian is someone who thinks of themselves as an Indian. But that's not so easy to do and one has to earn the entitlement somehow. You have to have a certain experience of the world in order to formulate this idea. I consider myself an Indian; I've had the experience of an Indian. I know how my father saw the world, and his father before him."<ref>Bordewich (1996) p67</ref>
===Blood quantum===
A common source of definition for an individual's being Indian is based on their blood (ancestry) quantum (often one-fourth) or documented Indian heritage. Almost two-thirds of all Indian federally recognized Indian tribes in the United States require a certain blood quantum for membership.<ref>Garroutte (2003) p16</ref> Indian heritage is a requirement for membership in most American Indian Tribes.<ref name="Peroff 1997 p487"/> The ] of 1934 used three criteria: tribal membership, ancestral descent, and blood quantum (one half). This was very influential in using blood quantum to restrict the definition of Indian.<ref>Brownell (2001) p284</ref> The use of blood quantum is problematic as Indians ] at a higher rate than any other ]. This could ultimately lead to their absorption into the rest of multiracial American society.<ref>Peroff (1997) p487 gives the rate of interracial marriage for Native Americans as 75%, whites as 5% and blacks as 8%</ref>


===Residence on tribal lands=== ===Connection to ancestral landbase===
] ]
The preservation and revitalization of language, cultural and ceremonial traditions is often seen as central to Native American identity.<ref name="Peroff 2002">Peroff (2002)</ref><ref name="PieratosLandBack">{{Cite journal |last1=Pieratos |first1=Nikki A |last2=Manning |first2=Sarah S |last3=Tilsen |first3=Nick |date=2021 |title=Land Back: A meta narrative to help indigenous people show up as movement leaders |url=http://journals.sagepub.com/doi/10.1177/1742715020976204 |journal=Leadership |language=en |volume=17 |issue=1 |pages=47–61 |doi=10.1177/1742715020976204 |s2cid=230526013 |issn=1742-7150}}</ref><ref name="KaurLandBack">{{Cite news |first=Harmeet |last=Kaur |title=Indigenous people across the US want their land back -- and the movement is gaining momentum |url=https://www.cnn.com/2020/11/25/us/indigenous-people-reclaiming-their-lands-trnd/index.html |access-date=2021-02-10 |work=]}}</ref> While these ways are also maintained by urban Indians and those who live in other Native communities, residence on tribal lands is often seen as important as well, with even those who are not permanent residents returning to their homelands for ceremonies and family functions. Many ]s live on their ancestral land bases, which may be ], reserves or land allotments, and may work in cultural centers in their communities. The ] movement, and other ] organizations, prioritizes the protection and preservation of ], as well as the landbase that provides traditional foods, housing and cultural meaning to the people.<ref name="PieratosLandBack"/><ref name="KaurLandBack"/> Many Native Americans feel the connection to ancestral lands is an important part of identity.<ref name="Peroff 2002"/>
Related to the remembrance and practice of traditions is the residence on tribal lands and ]s. Peroff (2002) emphasizes the role that proximity to other Native Americans (and ultimately proximity to tribal lands) plays in one's identity as a Native American.<ref>Peroff (2002) uses complexity theory methods to model the maintenance of traditions and self-identity based on proximity.</ref>


===Construction by others=== ===Construction by others===
] ]
European conceptions of "Indianness" are notable both for how they influence how American Indians see themselves and for how they have persisted as stereotypes which may negatively affect treatment of Indians. The ] stereotype is famous, but ] held other stereotypes as well. For example, some colonists imagined Indians as living in a state similar to their own ancestors, for example the ]s, ]s, and ] before "] with his ]s (or some other) had ... laid the ground to make us tame and civil."<ref>quoted from Robert Johnson, promoter for the fledgling Virginia Colony in Dyar (2003) p819</ref> European and ] conceptions of "Indianness" have influenced how some Native Americans see themselves, and have created persistent ] which may negatively affect treatment of Indians. The ] stereotype is famous, but ] held other stereotypes as well. For example, some colonists imagined Indians as living in a state similar to their own ancestors, for example the ]s, ]s, and ] before "] with his ]s (or some other) had ... laid the ground to make us tame and civil".<ref>Quoted from Robert Johnson, promoter for the fledgling Virginia Colony in Dyar (2003), p. 819</ref>


In the 19th and 20th century, particularly until ]'s tenure as Commissioner of Indian Affairs began in 1933, various policies of the United States federal and state governments amounted to what some consider an attack on Indian cultural identity and attempt to force assimilation. These policies included the banning of traditional religious ceremonies, forced cutting of Indian boys' hair, forced "conversion" to ] by withholding rations, forcing Indian children to go to boarding schools, boarding schools where the use of ] was not permitted, freedom of speech restrictions, and restricted allowances of travel between reservations.<ref>Russell (2002) p66-67</ref> In the Southwest sections of the U.S. under Spanish control until 1810, where the majority (80%) of inhabitants were Indigenous, Spanish government officials had similar policies.<ref>Russell (2002) p67</ref> In the 19th and 20th century, particularly until ]'s tenure as Commissioner of Indian Affairs began in 1933, various policies of the United States federal and state governments amounted to an attack on Indian cultural identity and an attempt to force assimilation. These policies included but were not limited to the banning of traditional religious ceremonies; forcing traditional hunter-gatherer people to begin farming, often on land that was unsuitable and produced few or no crops; forced cutting of hair; coercing "conversion" to ] by withholding rations; coercing Indian parents to send their children to ] where the use of ] was met with violence and where many children died under suspicious circumstances; freedom of speech restrictions; and restriction on travel between reservations.<ref>Russell (2002) p66-67</ref> In the Southwest sections of the U.S. under Spanish control until 1810, where the majority (80%) of inhabitants were Indigenous, Spanish government officials had similar policies.<ref>Russell (2002), p. 67</ref>


===United States government definitions=== ===United States government definitions===
{{main|Native American recognition in the United States}} {{main|Native American recognition in the United States}}
] at a White House ceremony]] ] at a White House ceremony]]
Some authors have pointed to a connection between social identity of Native Americans and their political status as members of a tribe. Most often there is the two-part definition: an "Indian" is someone who is a member of an Indian tribe and an "Indian tribe" is any tribe, band, nation, or organized Indian community recognized by the United States. In 1978, the Bureau of Indian Affairs established its Federal Acknowledgment Process to determine which among several hundred unrecognized groups qualified for a "government-to-government" relationship with the United States. Known today as the Office of Federal Acknowledgment, the office emerged as a response to previous inconsistent policies for recognizing tribes, made a pressing concern in the early 1970s by eastern Indian land claims, tribal controversies over which groups qualified for federal programs, and the rising number of non-federally recognized groups claiming a tribal identity. Both Congress and the federal courts can confer federal tribal recognition; however, after the creation of the Bureau of Indian Affairs' process, the majority of recognized tribes and members of congress support it over the alternatives. It established seven mandatory criteria that groups must prove "with a preponderance of the evidence" to secure status. Of these, the majority of tribes that have failed could not meet the requirements for establishing outside identification of tribal identity, community, political authority, and descent from an aboriginal tribe. Most scholars and unrecognized tribes lambast the government process, arguing its definitions of tribalism are archaic, impossible to prove in light of the history of colonialism, and can only be met by established tribes, thus creating a "catch-22" for left out groups. Despite this, many tribal groups such as the Cherokee Nation and the other Five Tribes support it, arguing that its definitions and rigor best reflect their notions of tribalism; they believe its rigor protects tribal sovereignty and tribal identity against hundreds of interlopers seeking undue access to tribal resources and identities.<ref>Miller (2004); Miller (2013); Ray (2007) p399</ref> There are 561 ] in the United States, which are recognized as having the right to establish their own legal requirements for membership.<ref>This right was upheld by the US Supreme Court in ] in 1978, which is discussed in Ray (2007) p403, see also {{cite web |url=http://www.america.gov/st/washfile-english/2005/January/200501281313241CJsamohT0.7689478.html|work=america.gov |title=The U.S. Relationship To American Indian and Alaska Native Tribes |accessdate=February 8, 2006}}.</ref> In recent times, legislation related to Indians uses the "political" definition of identifying as Indians those who are members of federally recognized tribes.<ref>Most often given is the two-part definition: an "Indian" is someone who is a member of an Indian tribe and an "Indian tribe" is any tribe, band, nation, or organized Indian community recognized by the United States. In 1978, the Bureau of Indian Affairs established its Federal Acknowledgment Process to determine which among several hundred unrecognized groups qualified for a "government-to-government" relationship with the United States. Known today as the Office of Federal Acknowledgment, the office emerged as a response to previous inconsistent policies for recognizing tribes, made a pressing concern in the early 1970s by eastern Indian land claims, tribal controversies over which groups qualified for federal programs, and the rising number of non-federally recognized groups claiming a tribal identity. Both Congress and the federal courts can confer federal tribal recognition; however, after the creation of the Bureau of Indian Affairs' process, the majority of recognized tribes and members of congress support it over the alternatives. It established seven mandatory criteria that groups must prove "with a preponderance of the evidence" to secure status. Of these, the majority of tribes that have failed could not meet the requirements for establishing outside identification of tribal identity, community, political authority, and descent from an aboriginal tribe. Most scholars and unrecognized tribes lambast the government process, arguing its definitions of tribalism are archaic, impossible to prove in light of the history of colonialism, and can only be met by established tribes, thus creating a "catch-22" for left out groups. Despite this, many tribal groups such as the Cherokee Nation and the other Five Tribes support it, arguing that its definitions and rigor best reflect their notions of tribalism; they believe its rigor protects tribal sovereignty and tribal identity against hundreds of interlopers seeking undue access to tribal resources and identities.</ref> Some authors have pointed to a connection between the social identity of Native Americans and their political status as members of a tribe.<ref>Ray (2007), p. 399</ref> There are 561 ] in the United States, which have the right to establish their own legal requirements for membership.<ref>This right was upheld by the U.S. Supreme Court in ] in 1978, which is discussed in Ray (2007) p. 403; see also {{cite web|url=http://www.america.gov/st/washfile-english/2005/January/200501281313241CJsamohT0.7689478.html|work=america.gov|title=The U.S. Relationship To American Indian and Alaska Native Tribes|access-date=February 8, 2006|url-status=dead|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20090519065837/https://www.america.gov/st/washfile-english/2005/January/200501281313241CJsamohT0.7689478.html|archive-date=May 19, 2009}}.</ref> In recent times, legislation related to Indians uses the "political" definition, identifying as Indians those who are members of federally recognized tribes. Most often given is the two-part definition: an "Indian" is someone who is a member of an Indian tribe and an "Indian tribe" is any tribe, band, nation, or organized Indian community recognized by the United States.{{citation needed|date=December 2024}}


The government and many tribes prefer this definition because it allows the tribes to determine the meaning of "Indianness" in their own membership criteria. However, some still criticize this saying that the federal government's historic role in setting certain conditions on the nature of membership criteria means that this definition does not transcend federal government influence.<ref name="Brownell 2001 p299">Brownell (2001) p299</ref> Thus in some sense, one has greater claim to a Native American identity if one belongs to a federally recognized tribe, recognition that many who claim Indian identity do not have.<ref>Nagel remarks that 1,878,285 people marked Native American as their ethnicity on the 1990 US Census, while the number of members of federally recognized tribes is much smaller, Nagel (1995) p948</ref> Holly Reckord, an anthropologist who heads the BIA Branch of Acknowledgment and Recognition, discusses the most common outcome for those who seek membership: "We check and find that they haven't a trace of Indian ancestry, yet they are still totally convinced that they are Indians. Even if you have a trace of Indian blood, why do you want to select that for your identity, and not your Irish or Italian? It's not clear why, but at this point in time, a lot of people want to be Indian.".<ref>Bordewich (1996) 66</ref> The government and many tribes prefer this definition because it allows the tribes to determine the meaning of "Indianness" in their own membership criteria. However, some still criticize this, saying that the federal government's historic role in setting certain conditions on the nature of membership criteria means that this definition does not transcend federal government influence.<ref>Brownell (2001), p. 299</ref> Thus in some sense, one has greater claim to a Native American identity if one belongs to a federally recognized tribe, recognition that many who claim Indian identity do not have.<ref>Nagel remarks that 1,878,285 people marked Native American as their ethnicity on the 1990 U.S. Census, while the number of members of federally recognized tribes is much smaller (Nagel (1995), p. 948).</ref> Holly Reckord, an anthropologist who heads the BIA Branch of Acknowledgment and Recognition, discusses the most common outcome for those who seek membership: "We check and find that they haven't a trace of Indian ancestry, yet they are still totally convinced that they are Indians. Even if you have a trace of Indian blood, why do you want to select that for your identity, and not your Irish or Italian? It's not clear why, but at this point in time, a lot of people want to be Indian".<ref>Bordewich (1996), p. 66</ref>


The ] of 1990 attempts to take into account the limits of definitions based in federally recognized tribal membership. In the act, having the status of a state-recognized Indian tribe is discussed, as well as having tribal recognition as an "Indian artisan" independent of tribal membership. In certain circumstances, this allows people who identify as Indian to legally label their products as "Indian made", even when they are not members of a federally recognized tribe.<ref>Brownell (2001) p313</ref> In legislative hearings, one Indian artist, whose mother is not Indian but whose father is ] and who was raised on a Seneca reservation, said, "I do not question the rights of the tribes to set whatever criteria they want for enrollment eligibility; but in my view, that is the extent of their rights, to say who is an enrolled Seneca or ] or ] or ] or any other tribe. Since there are mixed bloods with enrollment numbers and some of those with very small percentages of genetic Indian ancestry, I don't feel they have the right to say to those of us without enrollment numbers that we are not of Indian heritage, only that we are not enrolled.... To say that I am not and to prosecute me for telling people of my Indian heritage is to deny me some of my ]...and constitutes racial discrimination."<ref>Brownell (2001) p314</ref> The ] attempts to take into account the limits of definitions based in federally recognized tribal membership. In the act, having the status of a state-recognized Indian tribe is discussed, as well as having tribal recognition as an "Indian artisan" independent of tribal membership. In certain circumstances, this allows people who identify as Indian to legally label their products as "Indian made", even when they are not members of a federally recognized tribe.<ref>Brownell (2001), p. 313</ref> In legislative hearings, one Indian artist, whose mother is not Indian but whose father is ] and who was raised on a Seneca reservation, said, "I do not question the rights of the tribes to set whatever criteria they want for enrollment eligibility; but in my view, that is the extent of their rights, to say who is an enrolled Seneca or ] or ] or ] or any other tribe. Since there are mixed bloods with enrollment numbers and some of those with very small percentages of genetic Indian ancestry, I don't feel they have the right to say to those of us without enrollment numbers that we are not of Indian heritage, only that we are not enrolled.... To say that I am not and to prosecute me for telling people of my Indian heritage is to deny me some of my ]...and constitutes racial discrimination."<ref>Brownell (2001), p. 314</ref>


Some critics believe that using federal laws to define "Indian" allows continued government control over Indians, even as the government seeks to establish a sense of deference to tribal sovereignty. Critics say Indianness becomes a rigid legal term defined by the BIA, rather than an expression of tradition, history, and culture. For instance, some groups which claim descendants from tribes that predate European contact have not been able to achieve federal recognition. On the other hand, Indian tribes have participated in setting policy with BIA as to how tribes should be recognized. According to Rennard Strickland, an Indian Law scholar, the federal government uses the process of recognizing groups to "divide and conquer Indians: "the question of who is 'more' or 'most' Indian may draw people away from common concerns."<ref>Brownell (2001) p302</ref> Some critics believe that using federal laws to define who is "Indian" allows continued government control over Indians, even as the government seeks to establish a sense of deference to tribal sovereignty. Critics say Indianness becomes a rigid legal term defined by the BIA, rather than an expression of tradition, history, and culture. For instance, some groups which claim descendants from tribes that predate European contact have not been able to achieve federal recognition. On the other hand, Indian tribes have participated in setting policy with BIA as to how tribes should be recognized. According to Rennard Strickland, an Indian Law scholar, the federal government uses the process of recognizing groups to "]" Indians: "the question of who is 'more' or 'most' Indian may draw people away from common concerns".<ref>Brownell (2001), p. 302</ref>


===Self-identification=== ===Self-identification===
In some cases, individuals and groups ] as Native American. A "self-identified Indian" is a person who may not satisfy the legal requirements which define a Native American according to the criteria set by the tribe or Nation in which they claim citizenship or heritage.<ref>Garroutte (2003), p. 82</ref> Individuals may identify as Indian without outside verification in different settings, such as when filling out a census form or college application, or writing a letter to the editor of a newspaper.<ref name="Peroff 1997 p487"/> The ] allows citizens to self-identify as any ethnicity, including "Native American/Alaska Native", without requiring validation.<ref>Brownell (2001), p. 276-277 notes that much of the $180 billion dollars a year in federal money for the benefit of Indians are apportioned on the basis of this census population.</ref> For proponents of self-identification, it allows both uniformity and includes many different ideas of "Indianness".<ref>Brownell (2001), p. 315</ref>
{{Further|List of people of self-identified Cherokee ancestry}}
In some cases, one's opinion about one's self is sufficient to define one as Indian. One can often choose to identify as Indian without outside verification when filling out a census form, a college application, or writing a letter to the editor of a newspaper.<ref name="Peroff 1997 p487"/> A "self-identified Indian" is a person who may not satisfy the legal requirements which define a Native American according to the United States government or a single tribe, but who understands and expresses her own identity as Native American.<ref>Garroutte (2003) p82</ref> However, many people who do not satisfy tribal requirements identify themselves as Native American - whether due to biology, culture, or some other reason. The ] allows citizens to check any ethnicity without requirements of validation. Thus, the census allows individuals to self-identify as Indian, merely by checking the racial category, "Native American/Alaska Native".<ref>Brownell (2001) p276-277 notes that much of the $180 billion dollars a year in federal for the benefit of Indians are apportioned on the basis of this census population</ref> In 1990, about 60 percent of the over 1.8 million persons identifying themselves in the census as American Indian were actually enrolled in a federally recognized tribe.<ref>Thornton 1997, page 38</ref> Using self identification allows both uniformity and includes many different ideas of "Indianness".<ref name="Brownell 2001 p315">Brownell (2001) p315</ref> It also avoids marginalizing the nearly half a million who receive no benefits because
* they are not enrolled members of a federally recognized tribe, or
* they are full members of tribes which have never been recognized, or
* they are members of tribes whose recognition was terminated by the government during programs in the 1950s and 1960s.<ref name="Brownell 2001 p299"/>


In 1990, only about 60 percent of the more than 1.8 million persons identifying themselves in the census as American Indian were actually enrolled in a federally recognized tribe.<ref>Thornton (1997), p. 38</ref> ] sociologist Joane Nagel traces the tripling in the number of Americans reporting American Indian as their race in the U.S. Census from 1960 to 1990 (from 523,591 to 1,878,285) to federal Indian policy, American ethnic politics, and American Indian political activism. She suggests much of the purported growth in numbers was due to "]", where people who previously marked one group later mark another. She suggests this is made possible by American society's increasing focus on ethnicity as a social construct.<ref>Nagel (1995) p948</ref> In addition, since 2000, self-identification in U.S. censuses has allowed individuals to check multiple ethnic categories, which is a factor in the increased American Indian population since the 1990 census.<ref>Russell, p. 149</ref><ref>Brownell (2001), p. 315/</ref>
Identity is in some way a personal issue; based on the way one feels about oneself and one's experiences. Horse (2001) describes five influences on self-identity as Indian:

Many people who do not satisfy tribal citizenship or heritage requirements identify themselves as Native American due to their own ideas of biology or culture. Those who self-identify may consider identity to be a personal issue, based on the way they feel about themselves and their experiences. Horse (2001) proposes five influences on self-identity as Indian:
*"The extent to which one is grounded in one’s Native American language and culture, one’s cultural identity"; *"The extent to which one is grounded in one’s Native American language and culture, one’s cultural identity";
*"The validity of one’s American Indian genealogy"; *"The validity of one’s American Indian genealogy";
*"The extent to which one holds a traditional American Indian general philosophy or worldview (emphasizing balance and harmony and drawing on Indian spirituality)"; *"The extent to which one holds a traditional American Indian general philosophy or worldview (emphasizing balance and harmony and drawing on Indian spirituality)";
*"One’s self-concept as an American Indian"; and *"One’s self-concept as an American Indian"; and
*"One’s enrollment (or lack of it) in a tribe."<ref>Horse (2005) p65</ref> *"One’s enrollment (or lack of it) in a tribe."<ref>Horse (2005), p. 65</ref>


Individuals may also self-identify because:
] sociologist Joane Nagel traces the tripling in the number of Americans reporting American Indian as their race in the U.S. Census from 1960 to 1990 (from 523,591 to 1,878,285) to federal Indian policy, American ethnic politics, and American Indian political activism. Much of the population "growth" was due to "]", where people who previously marked one group, later mark another. This is made possible by our increasing stress on ethnicity as a social construct.<ref>Nagel (1995) p948</ref> In addition, since 2000 ] in US censuses has allowed individuals to check multiple ethnic categories, which is a factor in the increased American Indian population since the 1990 census.<ref>Russell 149</ref> Yet, self-identification is problematic on many levels. It is sometimes said, in fun, that the largest tribe in the United States may be the "]".<ref name="Brownell 2001 p315"/>
* they are not enrolled members of a federally recognized tribe, or
* they are members of ]
* they are members of tribes whose recognition was terminated by the government during assimilation and elimination programs in the 1950s and 1960s.<ref>Brownell (2001), p. 299</ref>


Some individuals who self-identify as Native American, or who seek to define "Indianness" differently than the tribes they claim to belong to, may do so for reasons such as "a longing for recognition."<ref>Brownell (2001), p. 275</ref> Cynthia Hunt, who self-identifies as a member of the ] ] tribe, says: "I feel as if I'm not a real Indian until I've got that BIA stamp of approval .... You're told all your life that you're Indian, but sometimes you want to be that kind of Indian that everybody else accepts as Indian."<ref>Brownell +2001), p. 275</ref><ref name=LewisKrug/> ], who said his parents were both Native American although they were recorded as white, also expressed feelings of "not being a real Indian" because he was not enrolled in a tribe.{{refn|group=note|If ]' father had been 1/2 Choctaw, and his mother 1/2 Cherokee, as he reported, both Owens and his parents would have qualified for enrollment. However, census, military and other official documents all list his parents and grandparents as white.<ref name=Garroutte/>}} Despite this, he also wrote, "I am not a real Indian. ... Because growing up in different times, I naively thought that Indian was something we were, not something we did or had or were required to prove on demand. Listening to my mother's stories about ], about brutally hard lives and dreams that cut across the fabric of every experience, I thought I was Indian."<ref name=Garroutte>Eva Marie Garroutte, ''Real Indians: identity and the survival of Native America'', (2003), p. 14.</ref>
Garroutte identifies some practical problems with self-identification as a policy, quoting the struggles of Indian service providers who deal with many people who claim ancestors, some steps removed, who were Indian. She quotes a social worker, "Hell, if all that was real, there are more Cherokees in the world than there are ]."<ref>Garroutte (2003) p83</ref>


Others whose careers involve Native American topics may ] in academia, or to justify claims to land and territory.<ref name=BringsPlenty>{{cite journal|last1= Brings Plenty|first1= Trevino|authorlink= Trevino Brings Plenty|date= 30 December 2018|title= Pretend Indian Exegesis: The Pretend Indian Uncanny Valley Hypothesis in Literature and Beyond |url= https://journals.kent.ac.uk/index.php/transmotion/article/view/648/1356|journal= Transmotion|volume= 4|issue= 2|pages= 142–52 |doi= 10.22024/UniKent/03/tm.648|access-date= 25 November 2021|archive-date= November 25, 2021 |archive-url= https://web.archive.org/web/20211125082654/https://journals.kent.ac.uk/index.php/transmotion/article/view/648/1356 |url-status= live}}</ref><ref name=Wolfe>] (2006) Settler colonialism and the elimination of the native, Journal of Genocide Research, 8:4, 387-409, DOI: 10.1080/14623520601056240</ref> Journalist ] suggests that personal trauma from unrelated events in someone's life, such as a difficult upbringing, may motivate them to reject identification with people they see as perpetrators of oppression (e.g., white people) and to identify with those they see as victims instead.<ref name=LewisKrug>{{Cite web |last=Lewis |first=Helen |date=2021-03-16 |title=The Identity Hoaxers |url=https://www.theatlantic.com/international/archive/2021/03/krug-carrillo-dolezal-social-munchausen-syndrome/618289/ |access-date=2023-07-21 |website=The Atlantic |language=en |quote=The need to be associated with the victims rather than the perpetrators in such a context was, he said, often linked to another trauma in a person’s life. Perhaps the subconscious reasoning runs like this: ''White people are oppressors, but I’m a good person, not an oppressor, so I can’t be white.''}}</ref> ] suggests that the problem is more structural, stating that the ideology of ] actively needs to erase and then reproduce ] identity in order to create and justify claims to land and territory.<ref name=Wolfe/>
==== Personal reasons for self-identification ====
Many individuals seek broader definitions of Indian for personal reasons. Some people whose careers involve the fact that they emphasize Native American heritage and self-identify as Native American face difficulties if their appearance, behavior, or tribal membership status does not conform to legal and social definitions. Some have a longing for recognition. Cynthia Hunt, who self-identifies as a member of the ] ] tribe, says: "I feel as if I'm not a real Indian until I've got that BIA stamp of approval .... You're told all your life that you're Indian, but sometimes you want to be that kind of Indian that everybody else accepts as Indian."<ref>Brownell (2001) p275</ref>


Self-identification alone is insufficient for membership in most recognized tribes.<ref name=TallBear1/><ref name="RussellClaim"/><ref name="nhpr"/> Judge ] (]) has said, "The important issue is not who you claim but rather who claims you."<ref name="RussellClaim">{{cite news |last1=Russell |first1=Steve |authorlink=Steve Russell (writer)|title=Rachel Dolezal Outs Andrea Smith Again; Will Anybody Listen This Time? |url=https://newsmaven.io/indiancountrytoday/archive/rachel-dolezal-outs-andrea-smith-again-will-anybody-listen-this-time-h7m2k-3PP0qPj7n0fH5Pcw/ |accessdate=28 May 2019 |work=Indian Country Today |date=1 July 2015}}</ref> Similarly, academic ] (]) also says it's "a matter of who claims you". She suggests that self-identification by people without connections to or recognition from a tribe is "another kind of claim to own indigeneity", and may be motivated by "a moral claim or sense of belonging on the North American continent".<ref name=Crossan>{{cite web |url=https://www.pri.org/stories/2016-11-24/you-took-dna-test-and-it-says-you-are-native-american-so-what |title=You took a DNA test and it says you are Native American. So what?|author=Andrea Crossan|accessdate = 6 Aug 2019 |date= 24 Nov 2016 |publisher=]}}</ref>
The importance that one "look Indian" can be greater than one's biological or legal status. Native American Literature professor Becca Gercken-Hawkins writes about the trouble of recognition for those who do not look Indian; "I self-identify as Cherokee and ], and even though I do not look especially Indian with my dark curly hair and light skin, I easily meet my tribe's blood quantum standards. My family has been working for years to get the documentation that will allow us to be enrolled members of the ]. Because of my appearance and my lack of enrollment status, I expect questions regarding my identity, but even so, I was surprised when a fellow graduate student advised me—in all seriousness—to ] and work on a tan before any interviews. Thinking she was joking, I asked if I should put a feather in my hair, and she replied with a straight face that a feather might be a bit much, but I should at least wear traditional Native jewelry."<ref>Gercken-Hawkins (2003) p200</ref>


Garroutte says there are some practical problems with self-identification as a policy. She refers to the struggles of Indian service providers who deal with many people who claim Indian ancestors, some steps removed, which may strain or divert resources.<ref>Garroutte (2003), p. 83</ref> She also writes that by privileging an individual's claim over a tribe's right to define its own citizenship, self-identification can be a threat to ].<ref>Garroutte (2003), p. 88</ref>
Cherokee/] author ] discusses his feelings about his status of not being a real Indian because he's not enrolled. "Because growing up in different times, I naively thought that Indian was something we were, not something we did or had or were required to prove on demand. Listening to my mother's stories about ], about brutally hard lives and dreams that cut across the fabric of every experience, I thought I was Indian."<ref>Eva Marie Garroutte opens with these lines in her book, ''Real Indians: identity and the survival of Native America''. (2003)</ref>


===Pan-Indianism and pretendians===
==Historic struggles==
{{main|Pan-Indianism|Pretendian}}
] anthropologist J. Anthony Paredes considers the question of Indianness that may be asked about pre-ceramic peoples (what modern archaeologists call the ]), pre-maize burial mound cultures, etc. Paredes asks, "Would any <nowiki>] high priest<nowiki>]</nowiki> have been any less awed than ourselves to come upon a so-called ] hunter hurling a spear at a woolly ]?" His question reflects the point that indigenous cultures are themselves the products of millennia of history and change.<ref>Paredes (1995) p346</ref>
In 1911, ], ], and others founded the ] as the first national association founded and run primarily by Native Americans. The group campaigned for full citizenship for Indians, and other reforms, goals similar to other groups and fraternal clubs, which led to blurred distinctions between the different groups and their members.<ref>Carpenter (2005) p141</ref> In 1918, ] Cleaver Warden testified in hearings related to Indian religious ceremonies, "We only ask a fair and impartial trial by reasonable white people, not half-breeds who do not know a bit of their ancestors or kindred. A true Indian is one who helps for a race and not that secretary of the Society of American Indians."{{citation needed|date=December 2024}}{{relevance?|date=December 2024}}


In the 1920s fraternal clubs based on "Indian" themes but open to, founded by, and sometimes solely consisting of, white people were common in ]. Some included Native Americans in their leadership, and were dedicated to civil rights for Native Americans. Others were formed by non-Natives and included activities such as ] and bestowed titles such as "princess" and "chief" to non-Natives, allowing non-Natives to ].<ref>Carpenter (2005) p143</ref> A non-Native woman calling herself "Princess Chinquilla" (who claimed to have been separated from her ] parents at birth) and her associate ] (aka Skiuhushu) (]) created a fraternal club which they claimed was "founded by white people to help the red race". A court case was set to investigate their identities.<ref>Carpenter (2005), p. 139</ref> ] Commissioner, ] also formed a similar club.<ref>Carpenter (2005) p. 139</ref>
The question of "Indianness" was different in colonial times. Integration into Indian tribes was not difficult, as Indians typically accepted persons based not on ethnic or racial characteristics, but on learnable and acquirable designators such as "language, culturally appropriate behavior, social affiliation, and loyalty."<ref name="Dyar 2003 p823">Dyar (2003) p823</ref> Non-Indian captives were often adopted into society, including, famously, ]. As a side note, the "]" was a ceremony that was often misunderstood as a form of torture, or punishment but within Indian society was seen as a ritual way for the captives to leave their European society and become a tribal member.<ref name="Dyar 2003 p823"/>


] ]
Questions of Native American identity experienced a resurgence and expanded meaning in the 1960s and 1970s with ] movements. Groups like the ] unified nationalist identity, in contrast to the "brotherhood of tribes" nationalism of groups like the ] and the ].<ref>Bonney (1977), p. 210.</ref> This ] approach to identity has been cited to the teachings of 19th-century ] leader ] as an effort to unify all Indians against white oppression.{{refn|group=note|Particularly cited is Tecumseh's concern with the alienation of Indian lands and his 1812 statement about Indian unity as discussed in Bonney (1977), p. 229.}} The political and social movements of the 1960s and 1970s led to a dramatic change in how many Native Americans saw their identity, both as separate from non-Natives, as members of tribal nations, and as members of a unified category encompassing all Indians.<ref>Schulz (1998)</ref>
Since the mid-19th century, controversy and competition have worked both within and outside tribes, as societies evolved. In the early 1860s, novelist ] led a group of delegates to ] in an attempt to gain federal recognition for a "Southern Cherokee Nation" which was a faction that was opposed to the leadership of rival faction leader and Cherokee Chief ].<ref name="Christiensen 1992">Christiensen 1992</ref>


===Genetic research===
In 1911, ], ], and others founded the ] as the first national association founded and run primarily by Native Americans. The group campaigned for full citizenship for Indians, and other reforms, goals similar to other groups and fraternal clubs, which led to blurred distinctions between the different groups and their members.<ref>Carpenter (2005) p141</ref> With different groups and people of different ethnicities involved in parallel and often competing groups, accusations that one was not a real Indian was a painful accusation for those involved. In 1918, ] Cleaver Warden testified in hearings related to Indian religious ceremonies, "We only ask a fair and impartial trial by reasonable white people, not half-breeds who do not know a bit of their ancestors or kindred. A true Indian is one who helps for a race and not that secretary of the ]."
{{Main|Genetic history of Indigenous peoples of the Americas}}
] of worldwide populations in HGDP.<ref>{{Cite journal |last=Aghakhanian |first=Farhang |date=14 April 2015 |title=Unravelling the Genetic History of Negritos and Indigenous Populations of Southeast Asia |url=https://academic.oup.com/gbe/article/7/5/1206/604030 |journal=Genome Biology and Evolution |volume=7 |issue=5 |pages=1206–1215 |doi=10.1093/gbe/evv065 |pmc=4453060 |pmid=25877615 |access-date=2022-05-08}}</ref>]]


In ] ], Native American ancestry results are based largely on genetic databases collected from ] as well as ] populations, and not on data isolated to ], due to a lack of Native American participants in these studies.<ref name=Garrison/><ref name=SureshGLP/><ref name=CareyNHGRI/> These genetic indicators have also been detected in non-Indigenous populations. The accuracy of the results in these studies remains unclear.<ref>{{harvnb|Bryc|2015|ps=: "Previous studies have shown that African Americans in the US typically carry segments of DNA shaped by contributions from peoples of Europe, Africa, and the Americas, with variation in African and European admixture proportions across individuals and differences in groups across parts of the country.2–4 More recent studies that utilized high-density genotype data provide reliable individual ancestry estimates, illustrate the large variability in African and European ancestry proportions at an individual level, and are able to detect low proportions of Native American ancestry.3–11 Latinos across the Americas have differing proportions of Native American, African, and European genetic ancestry, shaped by local historical interactions with migrants brought by the slave trade, European settlement, and indigenous Native American populations.12–18 Individuals from countries across South America, the Caribbean, and Mexico have different profiles of genetic ancestry molded by each population’s unique history and interactions with local Native American populations.1,19–25 European Americans are often used as proxies for Europeans in genetic studies.26 European Americans, however, have a history of admixture of many genetically distinct European populations.27,28 Studies have shown that European Americans also have non-European ancestry, including African, Native American, and Asian, though it has been poorly quantified with some discordance among estimates even within studies.29–32"}}</ref>
In the 1920s, a famous court case was set to investigate the ethnic identity of a woman known as "]" and her associate ] (aka Skiuhushu).<ref>Carpenter (2005) p139</ref> Chinquilla was a New York woman who claimed to have been separated from her Cheyenne parents at birth. She and James created a fraternal club which was to counter existing groups "founded by white people to help the red race" in that it was founded by Indians. The club's opening received much praise for supporting this purpose, and was seen as authentic; it involved a Council Fire, the peace pipe, and speeches by ], ], and ] President Haven Emerson. In the 1920s, fraternal clubs were common in New York, and titles such as "princess" and "chief" were bestowed by the club to Natives and non-Natives.<ref>Carpenter (2005) p143</ref> This allowed non-Natives to "try on" Indian identities.


Genetic research of Native American ancestry, as well as consumer ], has been heavily criticized by Native American academics such as geneticist and bioethicist ] (]) and academic ] (]),<ref name=TsosieMatthews/> who have said that genetic tests cannot pinpoint descent from specific ]s, and that tests cannot determine whether someone is Native American or not.<ref name=CBCTallBear/><ref name=NativeDNA/><ref name=TsosieMatthews/><ref name=CareyNHGRI/> Bioethicist and geneticist ] (]) also said that no genetic test can determine who is Native American, nor can the tests definitively prove Native American ancestry, largely because of an insufficient number of North American Indigenous people in genetic databases.<ref name=Garrison>{{cite journal |last1=Garrison |first1=Nanibaa' A. |title=Genetic Ancestry Testing with Tribes: Ethics, Identity & Health Implications |journal=Daedalus |date=March 2018 |volume=147 |issue=2 |pages=60–69 |doi=10.1162/DAED_a_00490 |s2cid=57571035 |url=https://direct.mit.edu/daed/article/147/2/60/27216/Genetic-Ancestry-Testing-with-Tribes-Ethics}} "Despite advances in genetic tests' capacity to pinpoint ancestral relationships, none of the companies can definitively state that ancestral relationships are aligned with any particular tribe. No genetic tests can determine tribal affiliation, nor can they definitively prove Native American ancestry. As we have seen, the key reason behind these limits is simply that there are not enough data in the databases to make strong conclusions."</ref> This concern is also shared by ] (NHGRI) Bioethics Core Director Sara Hull and ] (NIH) bioethicist Hina Walajahi, who adds that direct-to-consumer (DTC) genetic ancestry kits "fall short on accuracy because they only offer a probability toward a certain ancestry. So, a test that claims an individual has Native American ancestry, could be wrong."<ref name=CareyNHGRI/><ref name=SureshGLP/> The ] has also said that ] testing is not a valid means of determining Native American ancestry, and that the concept of using ] to determine who is or is not Native American threatens ].<ref name="genej" />
Just as the struggle for recognition is not new, Indian entrepreneurship based on that recognition is not new. An example is a stipulation of the ] that gave ] the exclusive right to operate certain ferries and "houses of entertainment" along a federal road from ] to ], as the road went over parts of Creek Nation land purchased as an easement.<ref>Paredes (1995) p357</ref>


Genetically, Native Americans are most closely related to ], while approximately 37% of their ancestry is derived from ]. According to ], Native Americans descend from admixture between Ancient North Eurasian populations and a daughter population of ancient East Asians, which lead to the emergence of the ancestral populations of the ]. The exact location of where the admixture took place is unknown, and the migratory movements that united the two populations are a matter of debate.<ref>{{cite book |last1=Raff |first1=Jennifer |title=Origin: A Genetic History of the Americas |date=8 February 2022 |publisher=Grand Central Publishing |isbn=978-1-5387-4970-8 |page=188 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=C5jrDwAAQBAJ&pg=PT188 |language=en}} "We know from later comparisons that the Mal'ta boys' people were direct descendants of the Ancient North Siberians from Yana (7). They were broadly ancestral to present day Eurasians. But in comparing his genome to present day populations from across the world, they found that he was also closely related to present day Native Americans; his population was directly ancestral to them. Mal'ta's population -- the ancient Northern Siberians, seems to have encountered the daughter East Asian population described at the beginning of this chapter around 25,000 years ago and interbred with them. Current estimates suggest that approximately 63% of the First Peoples' ancestry comes from the East Asian group and the rest from the Ancient North Siberians. We're not sure where this interaction took place. Some archaeologists believe that it occurred in East Asia, suggesting that this is where the Siberians moved during the LGM" "There's also a case to be made for this interaction having taken place bear the Lake Baikal region in Siberia from genetic evidence, too" "But other archaeologists and geneticists argue that the meeting of the two grandparent populations of Native Americans occurred because people moved north, not south, in response to the LGM"</ref>
==Unity and nationalism==


====Ethnicity admixture====
]
A 2014 study analyzed the genetic ancestry profiles of more than 150,000 customers of the DNA testing company ]. The ethnicity and identity data for the reference panels obtained from Durand, et al. was logged based on the participants' ] as Native American, European and African.<ref>{{harvnb|Bryc|2015|ps=: "We generated cohorts of self-reported European American, African American, and Latino individuals from self-reported ethnicity and identity. We obtained ancestry estimates from genotype data by using a Support Vector Machine-based algorithm that infers population ancestry with Native American, African, and European reference panels, leveraging geographic information collected through surveys (see Durand et al.33). For details on genotyping and ancestry deconvolution methods, see Subjects and Methods."}}</ref> The authors said that, on average, ] and ] had less than 1% of what they considered Native American ancestry, although some variation was observed, with those living west of the ] being more likely to have >1% of these indicators. ]s averaged 18.0%, although there was a significant amount of variation by geographic and ethnic origin: Latinos from the Southwest had considerably higher percentage results than those from the ] or ].<ref>{{Cite journal |last1=Bryc |first1=Katarzyna |date=January 2015 |title=The Genetic Ancestry of African Americans, Latinos, and European Americans across the United States |journal=The American Journal of Human Genetics |volume=96 |issue=1 |pages=37–53 |doi=10.1016/j.ajhg.2014.11.010 |pmid=25529636 |pmc=4289685 |issn=0002-9297}}</ref><ref name=NYTEuro>{{cite news |last1=Carl Zimmer |title=White? Black? A murky Distinction grows still murkier |url=https://www.nytimes.com/2014/12/25/science/23andme-genetic-ethnicity-study.html |access-date=21 October 2018 |work=The New York Times |date=24 December 2014 |quote=The researchers found that European-Americans had genomes that were on average 98.6 percent European, .19 percent African, and .18 Native American.}}</ref>
The issue of Indianness had somewhat expanded meaning in the 1960s with Indian nationalist movements such as the ]. The American Indian Movement unified nationalist identity was in contrast to the "brotherhood of tribes" nationalism of groups like the ] and the ].<ref>Bonney (1977) p210</ref> This unified Indian identity has been cited to the teachings of 19th century ] leader ] to unify all Indians against "white oppression."<ref>Particularly cited is Tecumseh's concern with the alienation of Indian lands and his 1812 statement about Indian unity as discussed in Bonney (1977) p229</ref> The movements of the 1960s changed dramatically how Indians see their identity, both as separate from whites, as a member of a tribe, and as a member of a unified category encompassing all Indians.<ref>Schulz (1998)</ref>


====Limitations of DNA research====
==Examples==
Within the field of human population genetics, some genetic studies are considered more accurate than others. According to Bryc, et al., studies using genotype data can reliably detect Native American ancestry at low proportions; however, other studies have given results that vary greatly, and their estimates of ancestry are poorly quantified.{{sfn|Bryc|2015}} Indigenous scholars have stated that DNA tests cannot reliably confirm Native American ancestry or tribal origin.<ref name=TallBear1/><ref name=CBCTallBear>{{cite news|last1=Geddes|first1=Linda|title='There is no DNA test to prove you're Native American' |url=https://www.newscientist.com/article/mg22129554-400-there-is-no-dna-test-to-prove-youre-native-american/ |accessdate=31 May 2019 |work=]|date=5 February 2014|archive-date=March 15, 2017|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20170315112433/https://www.newscientist.com/article/mg22129554-400-there-is-no-dna-test-to-prove-youre-native-american/|url-status=live}}</ref><ref name="genej">{{cite web | last=Marks | first=Jonathan | title=Genetic "Markers"- Not a Valid Test of Native Identity | website=Indigenous People's Council on Biocolonialism | url=http://www.ipcb.org/publications/briefing_papers/files/identity.html | access-date=2023-08-01 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20080725075627/http://www.ipcb.org/publications/briefing_papers/files/identity.html|archive-date= 25 July 2008|url-status=live }}</ref><ref name="Fitzgerald">{{cite book |last1=Fitzgerald |first1=Kathleen J. |title=Recognizing Race and Ethnicity: Power, Privilege, and Inequality |date=3 June 2020 |publisher=Routledge |isbn=978-0-429-51440-1 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=4T_pDwAAQBAJ&pg=PT102 |language=en}}</ref> While some genetic markers are considered more common among Native Americans, these markers are also found in Asia and other parts of the world.<ref name="bldl2">{{cite web|url=http://www.weyanoke.org/historyculture/hc-DNAandNativeAmericanAncestry.html|title=Can DNA Determine Who is American Native American?|year=2008|website=|publisher=The WEYANOKE Association|author=Kim TallBear|authorlink=Kim TallBear|accessdate=2009-05-11}}</ref> The most popular companies have no Indigenous North American DNA samples, and have stated that they use Central Asian and South or Central American populations as a reference instead; smaller companies may have a very small pool from one tribe who participated in a medical study.<ref name="tennant">{{cite web |last1=Tennant |first1=Amie Bowser |title=Why Your DNA Results Didn't Show Your Native American Ancestry |url=https://thegenealogyreporter.com/native-american-dna-test/ |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20181205083711/https://thegenealogyreporter.com/native-american-dna-test/|archive-date=5 Dec 2018|website=The Genealogy Reporter |accessdate=28 May 2019 |date=9 February 2018}}</ref><ref name=SureshGLP>{{cite web|title=Native Americans fear potential exploitation of their DNA |first=Arvind |last=Suresh |url=https://geneticliteracyproject.org/2016/10/06/native-americans-fear-potential-exploitation-dna/|publisher=] |date=6 Oct 2016 |access-date=7 Sep 2021 |archive-date=November 23, 2021|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20211123212846/https://geneticliteracyproject.org/2016/10/06/native-americans-fear-potential-exploitation-dna/ |url-status=live}}</ref><ref name=CareyNHGRI>{{cite web|title=DNA tests stand on shaky ground to define Native American identity|first=Teresa L.|last=Carey|url=https://www.genome.gov/news/news-release/DNA-tests-stand-on-shaky-ground-to-define-Native-American-identity|publisher=]|date=9 May 2019|access-date=7 Sep 2021 |archive-date=January 11, 2022 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20220111093421/https://www.genome.gov/news/news-release/DNA-tests-stand-on-shaky-ground-to-define-Native-American-identity |url-status=live}}</ref> The exploitation of Indigenous genetic material – such as the theft of human remains, land and artifacts – has led to widespread distrust and even boycotts of DNA testing companies by Native communities.<ref name=SureshGLP/><ref name=CareyNHGRI/><ref name="Fitzgerald" /> Attempts by non-Natives to racialize Indigenous identity by DNA tests have also been seen by Indigenous people as insensitive, racist, politically and financially motivated, and dangerous to the survival of Indigenous cultures.<ref name=HCNdrKT>{{cite news|last1=TallBear|first1=Kim|authorlink=Kim TallBear|title=Elizabeth Warren's claim to Cherokee ancestry is a form of violence - Be it by the barrel of a carbine or a mail-order DNA test, the American spirit demands the disappearance of Indigenous people|url=https://www.hcn.org/issues/51.2/tribal-affairs-elizabeth-warrens-claim-to-cherokee-ancestry-is-a-form-of-violence |accessdate=5 Nov 2019 |work=]|date=17 Jan 2019|archive-date=November 22, 2021|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20211122135715/https://www.hcn.org/issues/51.2/tribal-affairs-elizabeth-warrens-claim-to-cherokee-ancestry-is-a-form-of-violence/|url-status=live}}</ref>
Different tribes have unique cultures, histories, and situations that have made particular the question of identity in each tribe. Tribal membership may be based on descent, blood quantum, and/or reservation habitation.


Navajo ] and ] ] and ] academic ] have written about individuals discovering purported Native American ancestry through DNA testing, who then self-identify as Native American in general, or as members or descendants of a specific tribe.<ref name=TsosieMatthews>{{cite web |title=Two Native American geneticists interpret Elizabeth Warren's DNA test |url=https://theconversation.com/two-native-american-geneticists-interpret-elizabeth-warrens-dna-test-105274 |work=ABC News |access-date=January 31, 2023 |language=en |date=October 22, 2018 }}</ref> Both have said that Native American identity is cultural and not biological, and have defended ], and Indigenous cultural and political identities that they feel could be threatened when non-Natives use DNA testing to self-identify as Indigenous people.<ref name=Zimmer/> Tsosie states that commercial DNA testing companies do not have sufficient population samples to identify Native American ancestry,<ref name=TsosieMatthews/> and suggests that those who subsequently claim to belong to specific tribes based on these results are not respecting those tribes' rules regarding citizenship status.<ref>{{Cite web |last=Tsosie |first=Krystal |date=2018-10-17 |title=What to Make of Elizabeth Warren's DNA Test |url=https://www.theatlantic.com/ideas/archive/2018/10/what-make-elizabeth-warrens-dna-test/573205/ |access-date=2023-01-20 |website=The Atlantic |language=en}}</ref><ref name=Zimmer>{{cite news |last1=Zimmer |first1=Carl |title=Elizabeth Warren Has a Native American Ancestor, But Does That Make Her Native American? |url=https://www.nytimes.com/2018/10/15/science/elizabeth-warren-native-american.html |newspaper=The New York Times |access-date=2019-05-02 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20190314044339/https://www.nytimes.com/2018/10/15/science/elizabeth-warren-native-american.html |archive-date=2019-03-14 |url-status=live|date=2018-10-15 }}</ref><ref>{{cite news |last1=Levenson |first1=Michael |title=Is Elizabeth Warren's genetic test conclusive? |url=https://www.bostonglobe.com/metro/2018/10/15/warren-genetic-test-conclusive-complicated/in9hXjiHUg8SBSSt9C9fJN/story.html |access-date=13 May 2019 |work=BostonGlobe.com |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20190503153639/https://www.bostonglobe.com/metro/2018/10/15/warren-genetic-test-conclusive-complicated/in9hXjiHUg8SBSSt9C9fJN/story.html |archive-date=3 May 2019 |url-status=live|df=dmy-all }}</ref><ref name=Ruiz/> Tsosie also says that "'Native American' is a political designation that confers rights" which are subsequently threatened when those rights are tied to DNA tests.<ref name=Ruiz>{{cite web |last1=Ruiz |first1=Rebecca |title=What you should do if a DNA test suggests you're Native American |url=https://mashable.com/article/dna-test-native-american-ancestry-elizabeth-warren/#VNPmnOo11Zqj |website=Mashable |date=17 October 2018 |access-date=2019-05-02 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20190504004810/https://mashable.com/article/dna-test-native-american-ancestry-elizabeth-warren/#VNPmnOo11Zqj |archive-date=2019-05-04 |url-status=live}}</ref> TallBear states that not only is there no DNA test that can indicate a tribe, but "there is no DNA-test to prove you're Native American",<ref name=CBCTallBear/> and that white non-Natives with such DNA test results mostly continue to identify as white.<ref name=NativeDNA>{{Cite book| title=Native American DNA: Tribal-belonging and the false Promise of Genetic Science| isbn=| last1=TallBear| first1=Kim| author-link= Kim TallBear|year=2013|pages= 132–136}}</ref><ref name=CherokeeHeritage>{{cite news|last1=Gupta|first1=Prachi|title='Our Vote Matters Very Little': Kim TallBear on Elizabeth Warren's Attempt to Claim Native American Heritage |url=https://theslot.jezebel.com/our-vote-matters-very-little-kim-tallbear-on-elizabeth-1829783321 |access-date=29 March 2019|work=]|date=16 October 2018}}</ref> Despite the limitations of commercial DNA tests and the position tribes have taken on them, many non-Natives still seek commercial DNA test services as they may feel they have no other way to confirm whether or not they have Indigenous ancestry.<ref name="Fitzgerald" />
===Cherokee===


==Specific tribes==
Historically, race was not a factor in the acceptance of individuals into ], since historically, the ] viewed their self-identity as a political rather than racial distinction.<ref>AIRFA Federal Precedence Applied in State Court http://www.nativeamericanchurch.net/stott.html</ref> Going far back into antiquity based upon existing social and historical evidence as well as oral traditions among the ] themselves, the Cherokee society was best described as an Indian Republic. Theda Perdue (2000) recounts a story from "before the American Revolution" where a black slave named Molly is accepted as a Cherokee as a "replacement" for a woman who was beaten to death by her white husband. According to Cherokee tradition, vengeance for the woman's death was required for her soul to find peace, and the husband was able to prevent his own execution by fleeing to the town of ] (where according to Cherokee Law he was safe) and purchasing Molly as an exchange. When the wives family accepted Molly, later known as "Chickaw," she became a part of their clan (the ]), and thus Cherokee.<ref>Perdue (2000)</ref>
===Cherokee===
{{see also|Cherokee descent|Cherokee freedmen controversy}}
Non-Native constructs of race and ] are not factors in ] tribal citizenship eligibility (like the majority of Oklahoma tribes). To be considered a citizen in the Cherokee Nation, an individual must be a direct descendant of a Cherokee person, or a Cherokee freedmen ancestor, listed on the ].<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.cherokee.org/home.aspx?section=services&service=Registration&ID=8sRG9ZCF7PE=|title=Cherokee Nation > Home|access-date=2017-03-06|archive-date=2007-07-18|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20070718074313/http://www.cherokee.org/home.aspx?section=services&service=Registration&ID=8sRG9ZCF7PE=|url-status=dead}}</ref> The tribe currently has members who also have African, Latino, Asian, white and other ancestry.<ref>{{Cite web |url=https://indiancountrymedianetwork.com/news/politics/disappearing-indians-part-ii-the-hypocrisy-of-race-in-deciding-whos-enrolled/ |title=Disappearing Indians, Part II: The Hypocrisy of Race in Deciding Who's Enrolled - Indian Country Media Network |access-date=2017-03-06 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20170922094009/https://indiancountrymedianetwork.com/news/politics/disappearing-indians-part-ii-the-hypocrisy-of-race-in-deciding-whos-enrolled/ |archive-date=2017-09-22 |url-status=dead }}</ref> The other two Cherokee tribes, the ] and the ], do have a minimum blood quantum requirement. Numerous ], only some of which are authorized by Cherokee communities, operate in the ]{{citation needed|date=December 2024}}


Inheritance was largely matrilineal, and kinship and clan membership was of primary importance until around 1810, when the seven ] began the abolition of blood vengeance by giving the sacred duty to the new Cherokee National government. Clans formally relinquished judicial responsibilities by the 1820s when the Cherokee Supreme Court was established. When in 1825, the National Council extended citizenship to biracial children of Cherokee men, the matrilineal definition of clans was broken and clan membership no longer defined Cherokee citizenship. These ideas were largely incorporated into the 1827 Cherokee constitution.<ref>Perdue (2000) p564</ref> The constitution did, state that "No person who is of negro or mulatlo parentage, either by the father or mother side, shall be eligible to hold any office of profit, honor or trust under this Government," with an exception for, "negroes and descendants of white and Indian men by negro women who may have been set free."<ref>Perdue (2000) p564-565</ref> Although by this time, some Cherokee considered clans to be anachronistic, this feeling may have been more widely held among the elite than the general population.<ref>Perdue (2000) p566</ref> Thus even in the initial constitution, the Cherokee reserved the right to define who was and was not Cherokee as a political rather than racial distinction. Novelist ] led a group of delegates to Washington D.C. as early as the 1860s in an attempt to gain federal recognition for a "Southern Cherokee Nation" which was a faction that was opposed to the leadership of rival faction leader and Cherokee Chief ].<ref name="Christiensen 1992"/> The Cherokee, like most other Southeastern tribes, are historically ], with kinship and clan membership being determined through the mother's line. In 1825, when the Cherokee National Council extended citizenship to biracial children of Cherokee men, the strictly matrilineal definition of clans was altered.<ref>Perdue (2000), p. 564</ref> The constitution also stated that "No person who is of negro or mulatlo {{sic}} parentage, either by the father or mother side, shall be eligible to hold any office of profit, honor or trust under this Government", with an exception for, "negroes and descendants of white and Indian men by negro women who may have been set free". From the initial constitution, the Cherokee have reserved the right to define who is and is not Cherokee as a political rather than racial distinction.<ref>Perdue (2000), p. 564-565</ref>


===Navajo=== ===Navajo===
{{main|Navajo}}
Most of the 158,633 ]s enumerated in the 1980 census and the 219,198 Navajos enumerated in the 1990 census were enrolled in the ], which is the nation with the largest number of enrolled citizens. It is notable as there is only a small number of people who identify as Navajo who are not registered.<ref>Thornton 2004</ref>
There were 158,633 people who identified as Navajo enumerated in the 1980 census, and 219,198 in the 1990 census. The ] is the Native American nation with the largest number of enrolled citizens. According to Thornton, there are only a small number of people who self-identify as Navajo who are not citizens.<ref>Thornton 2004</ref>


===Lumbee=== ===Lumbee===
{{See also|Lumbee Tribe of North Carolina}}
In 1952, Lumbee people who were organized under the name Croatan Indians voted to adopt the name of "Lumbee," for the ] near their homelands. The US federal government acknowledged them as being Indians in the 1956 Lumbee Act but not as a federally recognized tribe.<ref>{{cite web |title=1956 Lumbee Act |url=https://www.uncp.edu/resources/museum-southeast-american-indian/faqs-and-links/1956-lumbee-act |website=University of North Carolina, Pembroke |access-date=13 July 2019}}</ref> The Act withheld the full benefits of federal recognition from the tribe. Since then, the Lumbee people have tried to appeal to Congress for legislation to gain full federal recognition. Their effort has been opposed by several federally recognized tribes.<ref name="lb">{{Cite book|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=lLbAgZBy3_8C&q=problems+with+indian+blood+and+black+indian&pg=PA25|title=The Lumbee problem: the making of an American Indian people |author= Karen I. Blu|access-date=2009-08-15 |year=1980 |publisher=]|isbn=0803261977 }}</ref><ref>Houghton, p.750.</ref>


When the ] of ] petitioned for recognition in 1974, many federally recognized tribes adamantly opposed them. These tribes made no secret of their fear that passage of the legislation would dilute services to historically recognized tribes.<ref>Brownell (2001) p304</ref> The Lumbee were at one point known by the state as the Cherokee tribe of Robeson County and applied for federal benefits under that name in the early 20th century.<ref name="Barrett 2007">Barrett (2007)</ref> The ] has been at the forefront of the opposition of the Lumbee. It is sometimes noted that if granted full federal recognition, the designation would bring tens of millions of dollars in federal benefits, and also the chance to open a casino along Interstate 95 (which would compete with a nearby Eastern Cherokee Nation casino).<ref name="Barrett 2007"/> When the ] of ] petitioned for recognition in 1974, many federally recognized tribes adamantly opposed them. These tribes made no secret of their fear that passage of the legislation would dilute services to historically recognized tribes.<ref>Brownell (2001) p304</ref> The Lumbee were at one point known by the state as the Cherokee Indians of Robeson County and applied for federal benefits under that name in the early 20th century.<ref name="Barrett 2007">Barrett (2007)</ref> The ] has been at the forefront of the opposition of the Lumbee. If granted full federal recognition, the designation would bring tens of millions of dollars in federal benefits, and also the chance to open a casino along Interstate 95 (which would compete with a nearby Eastern Cherokee Nation casino).<ref name="Barrett 2007"/>


==Footnotes== == See also ==
* ]
{{Reflist|3}}
* ]


==Bibliography== == Notes==
{{Reflist|group="note"}}
<div class="references-small">

==References==
{{Reflist|30em}}

===Bibliography===
{{refbegin|}}
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* Bonney, Rachel A. (1977) "The Role of AIM Leaders in Indian Nationalism." ''American Indian Quarterly'', Vol. 3, No. 3. (Autumn, 1977), pp.&nbsp;209–224. * Bonney, Rachel A. (1977) "The Role of AIM Leaders in Indian Nationalism." ''American Indian Quarterly'', Vol. 3, No. 3. (Autumn, 1977), pp.&nbsp;209–224.
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* {{cite book |editor1-last=Erkison |editor1-first=Kai T. |editor2-last=Versey |editor2-first=Christopher |title=American Indian Environments: Ecological Issues in Native American History |date=1994 |publisher=Syracuse University Press |location=Syracuse, NY |isbn=9780815622277}}
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* Ray, S. Allan. ''A Race or a Nation? Cherokee National Identity and the Status of Freedmen's Descendents''. ''Michigan Journal of Race and Law'', Vol. 12, 2007 (Accessible as a working paper as of July 12, 2007 ). * Ray, S. Alan. ''A Race or a Nation? Cherokee National Identity and the Status of Freedmen's Descendants''. ''Michigan Journal of Race and Law'', Vol. 12, 2007. Available at: https://repository.law.umich.edu/mjrl/vol12/iss2/4.
* Russell, Steve. (2004) "Review of Real Indians: Identity and the Survival of Native America", PoLAR: ''Political and Legal Anthropology Review''. May 2004, Vol. 27, No. 1, pp.&nbsp;147–153 * Russell, Steve. (2004) "Review of Real Indians: Identity and the Survival of Native America", PoLAR: ''Political and Legal Anthropology Review''. May 2004, Vol. 27, No. 1, pp.&nbsp;147–153
* Russell, Steve (2002). "Apples are the Color of Blood", ''Critical Sociology'', Vol. 28, 1, 2002, p.&nbsp;65 * Russell, Steve (2002). "Apples are the Color of Blood", ''Critical Sociology'', Vol. 28, 1, 2002, p.&nbsp;65
* Schulz, Amy J. (1998) "Navajo Women and the Politics of Identity", ''Social Problems'', Vol. 45, No. 3. (Aug., 1998), pp.&nbsp;336–355. * Schulz, Amy J. (1998) "Navajo Women and the Politics of Identity", ''Social Problems'', Vol. 45, No. 3. (Aug., 1998), pp.&nbsp;336–355.
* Sturm, Circe. (1998) "Blood Politics, Racial Classification, and Cherokee National Identity: The Trials and Tribulations of the Cherokee Freedmen". ''American Indian Quarterly'', Winter/Spring 1998, Vol 22. No 1&2 pgs 230-258 * Sturm, Circe. (1998) "Blood Politics, Racial Classification, and Cherokee National Identity: The Trials and Tribulations of the Cherokee Freedmen". ''American Indian Quarterly'', Winter/Spring 1998, Vol 22. No 1&2 pgs 230-258
* Thornton, Russell. (1992) ''The Cherokees: A Population History''. University of Nebraska Press, ISBN 0-8032-9410-7 * Thornton, Russell. (1992) ''The Cherokees: A Population History''. University of Nebraska Press, {{ISBN|0-8032-9410-7}}
* Thornton, Russell. (1997) "Tribal Membership Requirements and the Demography of 'Old' and 'New' Native Americans". ''Population Research and Policy Review'', Vol. 16, Issue 1, p.&nbsp;33 ISBN 0-8032-4416-9 * Thornton, Russell. (1997) "Tribal Membership Requirements and the Demography of 'Old' and 'New' Native Americans". ''Population Research and Policy Review'', Vol. 16, Issue 1, p.&nbsp;33 {{ISBN|0-8032-4416-9}}
* "Census 2000 PHC-T-18. American Indian and Alaska Native Tribes in the United States: 2000" United States Census Bureau, Census 2000, Special Tabulation (Accessed May 27, 2007 ) * "Census 2000 PHC-T-18. American Indian and Alaska Native Tribes in the United States: 2000" United States Census Bureau, Census 2000, Special Tabulation (Accessed May 27, 2007 )
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Latest revision as of 07:57, 11 December 2024

Alaska Native dancers at the University of Alaska, Fairbanks Art Museum, 2006
Caddo members of the Caddo Cultural Club, Binger, Oklahoma, 2008

Native American identity in the United States is a community identity, determined by the tribal nation the individual or group belongs to. While it is common for non-Natives to consider it a racial or ethnic identity, for Native Americans in the United States it is considered a political identity, based on citizenship and immediate family relationships. As culture can vary widely between the 574 extant federally recognized tribes in the United States, the idea of a single unified "Native American" racial identity is a European construct that does not have an equivalent in tribal thought.

While some groups and individuals self-identify as Native American, self-identification on its own does not make one eligible for membership among recognized tribes. There are a number of different factors which have been used by non-Natives to define "Indianness," and the source and potential use of the definition play a role in what definitions have been used in their writings, including culture, society, genes/biology, law, and self-identity. Peroff asks whether the definition should be dynamic and changeable across time and situation, or whether it is possible to define "Indianness" in a static way, based in how Indians adapt and adjust to dominant society, which may be called an "oppositional process" by which the boundaries between Indians and the dominant groups are maintained. Another reason for dynamic definitions is the process of "ethnogenesis", which is the process by which the ethnic identity of the group is developed and renewed as social organizations and cultures evolve. The question of identity, especially Indigenous identity, is common in many societies worldwide.

Factors and terminology

Main articles: Native Americans in the United States and Native American name controversy

Preferred terminology for Indigenous peoples of the Americas, Native Americans in the United States, or Indigenous Canadians as a whole varies regionally, as well as by age and other sociological factors. Most individuals prefer to be known as citizens or descendants of the exact tribes/nations they are from. As for general, overarching terms, the United States Census Bureau defines Native American as "all people indigenous [sic] to the United States and its territories—including Native Hawaiian and Other Pacific Islanders—whose data are published separately from American Indians and Alaska Natives".

The use of Native American or native American to refer to Indigenous peoples who live in the Americas came into widespread, common use during the civil rights era of the 1960s and 1970s. This term was considered to represent historical fact more accurately (i.e., "Native" cultures predated European colonization). In addition, activists also believed it was free of negative historical connotations that had come to be associated with previous terms. However, not all Native people accepted the change. In 1968, the American Indian Movement (AIM) was founded in the United States. In 1977, a delegation from the International Indian Treaty Council, an arm of AIM, elected to collectively identify as "American Indian", at the United Nations Conference on Indians in the Americas in Geneva, Switzerland.

Some Indigenous activists and public figures, particularly those from the Plains nations, such as Russell Means (Oglala Lakota), have preferred "Indian" to the more recently adopted "Native American". Means spoke frequently of his fear of the loss of traditions, languages, and sacred places. He was concerned that there may soon be no more Native Americans, only "Native American Americans, like Polish Americans and Italian Americans." As the number of self-reported "Indians" has grown (ten times as many today as in 1890), the number who carry on tribal traditions has reportedly shrunk (one fifth as many as in 1890), as has been common among many cultural groups over time. Means said, "We might speak our language, we might look like Indians and sound like Indians, but we won’t be Indians."

Between 1982 and 1993, most American manuals of style came to agree that "color terms" referring to ethnic groups, such as Black, should be capitalized as proper names, as well as Native American. By 2020, "Indigenous" was also included in these capitalization guidelines.

During the late 20th century the term "Indigenous peoples" evolved into a political term that refers to ethnic groups with historical ties to groups that existed in a territory prior to colonization or formation of a nation state. The "I" is capitalized as it refers to a group of people. In the Americas, the term "Indigenous peoples of the Americas" was adopted, and the term is tailored to specific geographic or political regions, such as "Indigenous peoples of Panama". "'Indigenous peoples' ... is a term that internationalizes the experiences, the issues and the struggles of some of the world's colonized peoples", writes Māori educator Linda Tuhiwai Smith. "The final 's' in 'Indigenous peoples' ... a way of recognizing that there are real differences between different Indigenous peoples." Many younger Native Americans now prefer "Indigenous" as a unifying term, over previous options.

Blood quantum or lineal descent

Main article: Blood quantum laws

Some tribes have a blood quantum requirement for citizenship. Others use other methods, such as lineal descent. While almost two-thirds of all federally recognized Indian tribes in the United States require a certain blood quantum for citizenship, tribal nations are sovereign nations, with a government to government relationship with the United States, and set their own enrollment criteria. The Indian Reorganization Act of 1934 used three criteria: tribal membership, ancestral descent, and blood quantum (one half).

Traditional

Reservation life has often been a blend of the traditional and the contemporary. In 1877, this Lakota family living at South Dakota's Rose Bud Agency had both tipis and log cabins.

While traditional definitions of Native American identity can vary between Native communities, such definitions usually refer to those who observe, preserve, and teach about the community's ancestral language, culture and ceremonies, and who protect and maintain the community's sacred sites and inherited landbase. The term is defined by Indigenous cultural standards, rather than mainstream academic and legal terminology. Language preservation in particular, and doing one's part to preserve the Native language of one's community, especially for young people, is seen as contributing to cultural survival, and is an important part of being "traditional". Those who maintain Native American traditions are often referred to as "traditional" or "traditionals".

Some Indian artists find traditional definitions especially important. Crow poet Henry Real Bird offers his own definition, "An Indian is one who offers tobacco to the ground, feeds the water, and prays to the four winds in his own language." Pulitzer Prize-winning Kiowa author N. Scott Momaday gives a definition that is less spiritual but still based in the traditions and experience of a person and their family, "An Indian is someone who thinks of themselves as an Indian. But that's not so easy to do and one has to earn the entitlement somehow. You have to have a certain experience of the world in order to formulate this idea. I consider myself an Indian; I've had the experience of an Indian. I know how my father saw the world, and his father before him."

Connection to ancestral landbase

BIA map of reservations in the United States

The preservation and revitalization of language, cultural and ceremonial traditions is often seen as central to Native American identity. While these ways are also maintained by urban Indians and those who live in other Native communities, residence on tribal lands is often seen as important as well, with even those who are not permanent residents returning to their homelands for ceremonies and family functions. Many Native American elders live on their ancestral land bases, which may be Indian reservations, reserves or land allotments, and may work in cultural centers in their communities. The Land Back movement, and other Native American civil rights organizations, prioritizes the protection and preservation of sacred sites, as well as the landbase that provides traditional foods, housing and cultural meaning to the people. Many Native Americans feel the connection to ancestral lands is an important part of identity.

Construction by others

Students at the Bismarck Indian School in the early twentieth century.

European and settler conceptions of "Indianness" have influenced how some Native Americans see themselves, and have created persistent stereotypes which may negatively affect treatment of Indians. The noble savage stereotype is famous, but American colonists held other stereotypes as well. For example, some colonists imagined Indians as living in a state similar to their own ancestors, for example the Picts, Gauls, and Britons before "Julius Caesar with his Roman legions (or some other) had ... laid the ground to make us tame and civil".

In the 19th and 20th century, particularly until John Collier's tenure as Commissioner of Indian Affairs began in 1933, various policies of the United States federal and state governments amounted to an attack on Indian cultural identity and an attempt to force assimilation. These policies included but were not limited to the banning of traditional religious ceremonies; forcing traditional hunter-gatherer people to begin farming, often on land that was unsuitable and produced few or no crops; forced cutting of hair; coercing "conversion" to Christianity by withholding rations; coercing Indian parents to send their children to boarding schools where the use of Native American languages was met with violence and where many children died under suspicious circumstances; freedom of speech restrictions; and restriction on travel between reservations. In the Southwest sections of the U.S. under Spanish control until 1810, where the majority (80%) of inhabitants were Indigenous, Spanish government officials had similar policies.

United States government definitions

Main article: Native American recognition in the United States
President Coolidge stands with four Osage Indians at a White House ceremony

Some authors have pointed to a connection between the social identity of Native Americans and their political status as members of a tribe. There are 561 federally recognized tribal governments in the United States, which have the right to establish their own legal requirements for membership. In recent times, legislation related to Indians uses the "political" definition, identifying as Indians those who are members of federally recognized tribes. Most often given is the two-part definition: an "Indian" is someone who is a member of an Indian tribe and an "Indian tribe" is any tribe, band, nation, or organized Indian community recognized by the United States.

The government and many tribes prefer this definition because it allows the tribes to determine the meaning of "Indianness" in their own membership criteria. However, some still criticize this, saying that the federal government's historic role in setting certain conditions on the nature of membership criteria means that this definition does not transcend federal government influence. Thus in some sense, one has greater claim to a Native American identity if one belongs to a federally recognized tribe, recognition that many who claim Indian identity do not have. Holly Reckord, an anthropologist who heads the BIA Branch of Acknowledgment and Recognition, discusses the most common outcome for those who seek membership: "We check and find that they haven't a trace of Indian ancestry, yet they are still totally convinced that they are Indians. Even if you have a trace of Indian blood, why do you want to select that for your identity, and not your Irish or Italian? It's not clear why, but at this point in time, a lot of people want to be Indian".

The Indian Arts and Crafts Act of 1990 attempts to take into account the limits of definitions based in federally recognized tribal membership. In the act, having the status of a state-recognized Indian tribe is discussed, as well as having tribal recognition as an "Indian artisan" independent of tribal membership. In certain circumstances, this allows people who identify as Indian to legally label their products as "Indian made", even when they are not members of a federally recognized tribe. In legislative hearings, one Indian artist, whose mother is not Indian but whose father is Seneca and who was raised on a Seneca reservation, said, "I do not question the rights of the tribes to set whatever criteria they want for enrollment eligibility; but in my view, that is the extent of their rights, to say who is an enrolled Seneca or Mohawk or Navajo or Cheyenne or any other tribe. Since there are mixed bloods with enrollment numbers and some of those with very small percentages of genetic Indian ancestry, I don't feel they have the right to say to those of us without enrollment numbers that we are not of Indian heritage, only that we are not enrolled.... To say that I am not and to prosecute me for telling people of my Indian heritage is to deny me some of my civil liberties...and constitutes racial discrimination."

Some critics believe that using federal laws to define who is "Indian" allows continued government control over Indians, even as the government seeks to establish a sense of deference to tribal sovereignty. Critics say Indianness becomes a rigid legal term defined by the BIA, rather than an expression of tradition, history, and culture. For instance, some groups which claim descendants from tribes that predate European contact have not been able to achieve federal recognition. On the other hand, Indian tribes have participated in setting policy with BIA as to how tribes should be recognized. According to Rennard Strickland, an Indian Law scholar, the federal government uses the process of recognizing groups to "divide and conquer" Indians: "the question of who is 'more' or 'most' Indian may draw people away from common concerns".

Self-identification

In some cases, individuals and groups self-identify as Native American. A "self-identified Indian" is a person who may not satisfy the legal requirements which define a Native American according to the criteria set by the tribe or Nation in which they claim citizenship or heritage. Individuals may identify as Indian without outside verification in different settings, such as when filling out a census form or college application, or writing a letter to the editor of a newspaper. The United States census allows citizens to self-identify as any ethnicity, including "Native American/Alaska Native", without requiring validation. For proponents of self-identification, it allows both uniformity and includes many different ideas of "Indianness".

In 1990, only about 60 percent of the more than 1.8 million persons identifying themselves in the census as American Indian were actually enrolled in a federally recognized tribe. University of Kansas sociologist Joane Nagel traces the tripling in the number of Americans reporting American Indian as their race in the U.S. Census from 1960 to 1990 (from 523,591 to 1,878,285) to federal Indian policy, American ethnic politics, and American Indian political activism. She suggests much of the purported growth in numbers was due to "ethnic switching", where people who previously marked one group later mark another. She suggests this is made possible by American society's increasing focus on ethnicity as a social construct. In addition, since 2000, self-identification in U.S. censuses has allowed individuals to check multiple ethnic categories, which is a factor in the increased American Indian population since the 1990 census.

Many people who do not satisfy tribal citizenship or heritage requirements identify themselves as Native American due to their own ideas of biology or culture. Those who self-identify may consider identity to be a personal issue, based on the way they feel about themselves and their experiences. Horse (2001) proposes five influences on self-identity as Indian:

  • "The extent to which one is grounded in one’s Native American language and culture, one’s cultural identity";
  • "The validity of one’s American Indian genealogy";
  • "The extent to which one holds a traditional American Indian general philosophy or worldview (emphasizing balance and harmony and drawing on Indian spirituality)";
  • "One’s self-concept as an American Indian"; and
  • "One’s enrollment (or lack of it) in a tribe."

Individuals may also self-identify because:

  • they are not enrolled members of a federally recognized tribe, or
  • they are members of groups which are not recognized as tribes
  • they are members of tribes whose recognition was terminated by the government during assimilation and elimination programs in the 1950s and 1960s.

Some individuals who self-identify as Native American, or who seek to define "Indianness" differently than the tribes they claim to belong to, may do so for reasons such as "a longing for recognition." Cynthia Hunt, who self-identifies as a member of the state-recognized Lumbee tribe, says: "I feel as if I'm not a real Indian until I've got that BIA stamp of approval .... You're told all your life that you're Indian, but sometimes you want to be that kind of Indian that everybody else accepts as Indian." Louis Owens, who said his parents were both Native American although they were recorded as white, also expressed feelings of "not being a real Indian" because he was not enrolled in a tribe. Despite this, he also wrote, "I am not a real Indian. ... Because growing up in different times, I naively thought that Indian was something we were, not something we did or had or were required to prove on demand. Listening to my mother's stories about Oklahoma, about brutally hard lives and dreams that cut across the fabric of every experience, I thought I was Indian."

Others whose careers involve Native American topics may self-identify for perceived advantages in academia, or to justify claims to land and territory. Journalist Helen Lewis suggests that personal trauma from unrelated events in someone's life, such as a difficult upbringing, may motivate them to reject identification with people they see as perpetrators of oppression (e.g., white people) and to identify with those they see as victims instead. Patrick Wolfe suggests that the problem is more structural, stating that the ideology of settler colonialism actively needs to erase and then reproduce Indigenous identity in order to create and justify claims to land and territory.

Self-identification alone is insufficient for membership in most recognized tribes. Judge Steve Russell (Cherokee Nation) has said, "The important issue is not who you claim but rather who claims you." Similarly, academic Kim TallBear (Sisseton Wahpeton Oyate) also says it's "a matter of who claims you". She suggests that self-identification by people without connections to or recognition from a tribe is "another kind of claim to own indigeneity", and may be motivated by "a moral claim or sense of belonging on the North American continent".

Garroutte says there are some practical problems with self-identification as a policy. She refers to the struggles of Indian service providers who deal with many people who claim Indian ancestors, some steps removed, which may strain or divert resources. She also writes that by privileging an individual's claim over a tribe's right to define its own citizenship, self-identification can be a threat to tribal sovereignty.

Pan-Indianism and pretendians

Main articles: Pan-Indianism and Pretendian

In 1911, Arthur C. Parker, Carlos Montezuma, and others founded the Society of American Indians as the first national association founded and run primarily by Native Americans. The group campaigned for full citizenship for Indians, and other reforms, goals similar to other groups and fraternal clubs, which led to blurred distinctions between the different groups and their members. In 1918, Arapaho Cleaver Warden testified in hearings related to Indian religious ceremonies, "We only ask a fair and impartial trial by reasonable white people, not half-breeds who do not know a bit of their ancestors or kindred. A true Indian is one who helps for a race and not that secretary of the Society of American Indians."

In the 1920s fraternal clubs based on "Indian" themes but open to, founded by, and sometimes solely consisting of, white people were common in New York City. Some included Native Americans in their leadership, and were dedicated to civil rights for Native Americans. Others were formed by non-Natives and included activities such as Playing Indian and bestowed titles such as "princess" and "chief" to non-Natives, allowing non-Natives to "try on" Indian identities. A non-Native woman calling herself "Princess Chinquilla" (who claimed to have been separated from her Cheyenne parents at birth) and her associate Red Fox James (aka Skiuhushu) (Blackfoot)) created a fraternal club which they claimed was "founded by white people to help the red race". A court case was set to investigate their identities. Bureau of Indian Affairs Commissioner, John Collier also formed a similar club.

This 1848 drawing of Tecumseh was based on a sketch done from life in 1808

Questions of Native American identity experienced a resurgence and expanded meaning in the 1960s and 1970s with Native American civil rights movements. Groups like the American Indian Movement unified nationalist identity, in contrast to the "brotherhood of tribes" nationalism of groups like the National Indian Youth Council and the National Congress of American Indians. This pan-Indian approach to identity has been cited to the teachings of 19th-century Shawnee leader Tecumseh as an effort to unify all Indians against white oppression. The political and social movements of the 1960s and 1970s led to a dramatic change in how many Native Americans saw their identity, both as separate from non-Natives, as members of tribal nations, and as members of a unified category encompassing all Indians.

Genetic research

Main article: Genetic history of Indigenous peoples of the Americas
PCA of worldwide populations in HGDP.

In human population genetics, Native American ancestry results are based largely on genetic databases collected from people from South and Central America as well as Central Asian populations, and not on data isolated to Native Americans in the United States, due to a lack of Native American participants in these studies. These genetic indicators have also been detected in non-Indigenous populations. The accuracy of the results in these studies remains unclear.

Genetic research of Native American ancestry, as well as consumer DNA testing, has been heavily criticized by Native American academics such as geneticist and bioethicist Krystal Tsosie (Navajo) and academic Kim TallBear (Dakota), who have said that genetic tests cannot pinpoint descent from specific Native American tribes, and that tests cannot determine whether someone is Native American or not. Bioethicist and geneticist Náníbaaʼ Garrison (Diné) also said that no genetic test can determine who is Native American, nor can the tests definitively prove Native American ancestry, largely because of an insufficient number of North American Indigenous people in genetic databases. This concern is also shared by National Human Genome Research Institute (NHGRI) Bioethics Core Director Sara Hull and National Institute of Health (NIH) bioethicist Hina Walajahi, who adds that direct-to-consumer (DTC) genetic ancestry kits "fall short on accuracy because they only offer a probability toward a certain ancestry. So, a test that claims an individual has Native American ancestry, could be wrong." The Indigenous Peoples Council on Biocolonialism has also said that haplogroup testing is not a valid means of determining Native American ancestry, and that the concept of using genetic testing to determine who is or is not Native American threatens tribal sovereignty.

Genetically, Native Americans are most closely related to East Asian people, while approximately 37% of their ancestry is derived from Ancient North Eurasians. According to Jennifer Raff, Native Americans descend from admixture between Ancient North Eurasian populations and a daughter population of ancient East Asians, which lead to the emergence of the ancestral populations of the Indigenous peoples of the Americas. The exact location of where the admixture took place is unknown, and the migratory movements that united the two populations are a matter of debate.

Ethnicity admixture

A 2014 study analyzed the genetic ancestry profiles of more than 150,000 customers of the DNA testing company 23andMe. The ethnicity and identity data for the reference panels obtained from Durand, et al. was logged based on the participants' self-identification as Native American, European and African. The authors said that, on average, African Americans and White Americans had less than 1% of what they considered Native American ancestry, although some variation was observed, with those living west of the Mississippi River being more likely to have >1% of these indicators. Latinos averaged 18.0%, although there was a significant amount of variation by geographic and ethnic origin: Latinos from the Southwest had considerably higher percentage results than those from the East Coast of the United States or Caribbean.

Limitations of DNA research

Within the field of human population genetics, some genetic studies are considered more accurate than others. According to Bryc, et al., studies using genotype data can reliably detect Native American ancestry at low proportions; however, other studies have given results that vary greatly, and their estimates of ancestry are poorly quantified. Indigenous scholars have stated that DNA tests cannot reliably confirm Native American ancestry or tribal origin. While some genetic markers are considered more common among Native Americans, these markers are also found in Asia and other parts of the world. The most popular companies have no Indigenous North American DNA samples, and have stated that they use Central Asian and South or Central American populations as a reference instead; smaller companies may have a very small pool from one tribe who participated in a medical study. The exploitation of Indigenous genetic material – such as the theft of human remains, land and artifacts – has led to widespread distrust and even boycotts of DNA testing companies by Native communities. Attempts by non-Natives to racialize Indigenous identity by DNA tests have also been seen by Indigenous people as insensitive, racist, politically and financially motivated, and dangerous to the survival of Indigenous cultures.

Navajo geneticist and bioethicist Krystal Tsosie and Dakota academic Kim TallBear have written about individuals discovering purported Native American ancestry through DNA testing, who then self-identify as Native American in general, or as members or descendants of a specific tribe. Both have said that Native American identity is cultural and not biological, and have defended Indigenous sovereignty, and Indigenous cultural and political identities that they feel could be threatened when non-Natives use DNA testing to self-identify as Indigenous people. Tsosie states that commercial DNA testing companies do not have sufficient population samples to identify Native American ancestry, and suggests that those who subsequently claim to belong to specific tribes based on these results are not respecting those tribes' rules regarding citizenship status. Tsosie also says that "'Native American' is a political designation that confers rights" which are subsequently threatened when those rights are tied to DNA tests. TallBear states that not only is there no DNA test that can indicate a tribe, but "there is no DNA-test to prove you're Native American", and that white non-Natives with such DNA test results mostly continue to identify as white. Despite the limitations of commercial DNA tests and the position tribes have taken on them, many non-Natives still seek commercial DNA test services as they may feel they have no other way to confirm whether or not they have Indigenous ancestry.

Specific tribes

Cherokee

See also: Cherokee descent and Cherokee freedmen controversy

Non-Native constructs of race and blood quantum are not factors in Cherokee Nation tribal citizenship eligibility (like the majority of Oklahoma tribes). To be considered a citizen in the Cherokee Nation, an individual must be a direct descendant of a Cherokee person, or a Cherokee freedmen ancestor, listed on the Dawes Rolls. The tribe currently has members who also have African, Latino, Asian, white and other ancestry. The other two Cherokee tribes, the Eastern Band of Cherokee Indians and the United Keetoowah Band of Cherokee Indians, do have a minimum blood quantum requirement. Numerous Cherokee heritage groups, only some of which are authorized by Cherokee communities, operate in the Southeastern U.S.

The Cherokee, like most other Southeastern tribes, are historically matrilineal, with kinship and clan membership being determined through the mother's line. In 1825, when the Cherokee National Council extended citizenship to biracial children of Cherokee men, the strictly matrilineal definition of clans was altered. The constitution also stated that "No person who is of negro or mulatlo [sic] parentage, either by the father or mother side, shall be eligible to hold any office of profit, honor or trust under this Government", with an exception for, "negroes and descendants of white and Indian men by negro women who may have been set free". From the initial constitution, the Cherokee have reserved the right to define who is and is not Cherokee as a political rather than racial distinction.

Navajo

Main article: Navajo

There were 158,633 people who identified as Navajo enumerated in the 1980 census, and 219,198 in the 1990 census. The Navajo Nation is the Native American nation with the largest number of enrolled citizens. According to Thornton, there are only a small number of people who self-identify as Navajo who are not citizens.

Lumbee

See also: Lumbee Tribe of North Carolina

In 1952, Lumbee people who were organized under the name Croatan Indians voted to adopt the name of "Lumbee," for the Lumber River near their homelands. The US federal government acknowledged them as being Indians in the 1956 Lumbee Act but not as a federally recognized tribe. The Act withheld the full benefits of federal recognition from the tribe. Since then, the Lumbee people have tried to appeal to Congress for legislation to gain full federal recognition. Their effort has been opposed by several federally recognized tribes.

When the Lumbee of North Carolina petitioned for recognition in 1974, many federally recognized tribes adamantly opposed them. These tribes made no secret of their fear that passage of the legislation would dilute services to historically recognized tribes. The Lumbee were at one point known by the state as the Cherokee Indians of Robeson County and applied for federal benefits under that name in the early 20th century. The Eastern Band of Cherokee Indians has been at the forefront of the opposition of the Lumbee. If granted full federal recognition, the designation would bring tens of millions of dollars in federal benefits, and also the chance to open a casino along Interstate 95 (which would compete with a nearby Eastern Cherokee Nation casino).

See also

Notes

  1. If Louis Owens' father had been 1/2 Choctaw, and his mother 1/2 Cherokee, as he reported, both Owens and his parents would have qualified for enrollment. However, census, military and other official documents all list his parents and grandparents as white.
  2. Particularly cited is Tecumseh's concern with the alienation of Indian lands and his 1812 statement about Indian unity as discussed in Bonney (1977), p. 229.

References

  1. ^ Kimberly TallBear (2003). "DNA, Blood, and Racializing the Tribe". Wíčazo Ša Review. 18 (1). University of Minnesota Press: 81–107. doi:10.1353/wic.2003.0008. JSTOR 140943. S2CID 201778441.
  2. ^ Furukawa, Julia (May 22, 2023). "Review of genealogies, other records fails to support local leaders' claims of Abenaki ancestry". New Hampshire Public Radio. Retrieved 7 July 2023.
  3. ^ Russell, Steve (1 July 2015). "Rachel Dolezal Outs Andrea Smith Again; Will Anybody Listen This Time?". Indian Country Today. Retrieved 28 May 2019.
  4. Garroutte (2003), Paredes (1995)
  5. ^ Peroff (1997) p487
  6. "U.S. Census Bureau History: American Indians and Alaska Natives". U.S. Census Bureau. Retrieved 30 July 2023.
  7. "Indian Eristic". Wisconsin Office of State Employment Relations. January 5, 2007. Retrieved 2007-10-17.
  8. Jennifer McClinton-Temple; Alan Velie (12 May 2010). Encyclopedia of American Indian Literature. Infobase Publishing. p. 12. ISBN 978-1-4381-2087-4.
  9. Peroff (1997) p492
  10. Wachal, Robert S. (Winter 2000). "The Capitalization of Black and Native American". American Speech. 75 (4): 364–65. doi:10.1215/00031283-75-4-364. S2CID 143199364. (subscription required)
  11. "AP changes writing style to capitalize "b" in Black". The Associated Press. June 19, 2020. Retrieved August 9, 2023. The news organization will also now capitalize Indigenous in reference to original inhabitants of a place.
  12. "FAQ: Capitalization". The Chicago Manual of Style. Retrieved August 9, 2023. 'We would capitalize "Indigenous" in both contexts: that of Indigenous people and groups, on the one hand, and Indigenous culture and society, on the other. Lowercase "indigenous" would be reserved for contexts in which the term does not apply to Indigenous people in any sense—for example, indigenous plant and animal species.'
  13. "Associated Press Stylebook". www.apstylebook.com. Archived from the original on 2021-08-16. Retrieved 2021-07-04.
  14. Smith, Linda Tuhiwai (1999). Decolonizing Methodologies: Research and Indigenous Peoples. London: Zed Books. p. 7. ISBN 978-1-85649-624-7.
  15. Garroutte (2003) p16
  16. ^ Etheridge (2007)
  17. Bordewich (1996) p67
  18. ^ Peroff (2002)
  19. ^ Pieratos, Nikki A; Manning, Sarah S; Tilsen, Nick (2021). "Land Back: A meta narrative to help indigenous people show up as movement leaders". Leadership. 17 (1): 47–61. doi:10.1177/1742715020976204. ISSN 1742-7150. S2CID 230526013.
  20. ^ Kaur, Harmeet. "Indigenous people across the US want their land back -- and the movement is gaining momentum". CNN. Retrieved 2021-02-10.
  21. Quoted from Robert Johnson, promoter for the fledgling Virginia Colony in Dyar (2003), p. 819
  22. Russell (2002) p66-67
  23. Russell (2002), p. 67
  24. Ray (2007), p. 399
  25. This right was upheld by the U.S. Supreme Court in Santa Clara Pueblo v. Martinez in 1978, which is discussed in Ray (2007) p. 403; see also "The U.S. Relationship To American Indian and Alaska Native Tribes". america.gov. Archived from the original on May 19, 2009. Retrieved February 8, 2006..
  26. Brownell (2001), p. 299
  27. Nagel remarks that 1,878,285 people marked Native American as their ethnicity on the 1990 U.S. Census, while the number of members of federally recognized tribes is much smaller (Nagel (1995), p. 948).
  28. Bordewich (1996), p. 66
  29. Brownell (2001), p. 313
  30. Brownell (2001), p. 314
  31. Brownell (2001), p. 302
  32. Garroutte (2003), p. 82
  33. Brownell (2001), p. 276-277 notes that much of the $180 billion dollars a year in federal money for the benefit of Indians are apportioned on the basis of this census population.
  34. Brownell (2001), p. 315
  35. Thornton (1997), p. 38
  36. Nagel (1995) p948
  37. Russell, p. 149
  38. Brownell (2001), p. 315/
  39. Horse (2005), p. 65
  40. Brownell (2001), p. 299
  41. Brownell (2001), p. 275
  42. Brownell +2001), p. 275
  43. ^ Lewis, Helen (2021-03-16). "The Identity Hoaxers". The Atlantic. Retrieved 2023-07-21. The need to be associated with the victims rather than the perpetrators in such a context was, he said, often linked to another trauma in a person's life. Perhaps the subconscious reasoning runs like this: White people are oppressors, but I'm a good person, not an oppressor, so I can't be white.
  44. ^ Eva Marie Garroutte, Real Indians: identity and the survival of Native America, (2003), p. 14.
  45. Brings Plenty, Trevino (30 December 2018). "Pretend Indian Exegesis: The Pretend Indian Uncanny Valley Hypothesis in Literature and Beyond". Transmotion. 4 (2): 142–52. doi:10.22024/UniKent/03/tm.648. Archived from the original on November 25, 2021. Retrieved 25 November 2021.
  46. ^ Wolfe, Patrick (2006) Settler colonialism and the elimination of the native, Journal of Genocide Research, 8:4, 387-409, DOI: 10.1080/14623520601056240
  47. Andrea Crossan (24 Nov 2016). "You took a DNA test and it says you are Native American. So what?". PRI's The World. Retrieved 6 Aug 2019.
  48. Garroutte (2003), p. 83
  49. Garroutte (2003), p. 88
  50. Carpenter (2005) p141
  51. Carpenter (2005) p143
  52. Carpenter (2005), p. 139
  53. Carpenter (2005) p. 139
  54. Bonney (1977), p. 210.
  55. Schulz (1998)
  56. Aghakhanian, Farhang (14 April 2015). "Unravelling the Genetic History of Negritos and Indigenous Populations of Southeast Asia". Genome Biology and Evolution. 7 (5): 1206–1215. doi:10.1093/gbe/evv065. PMC 4453060. PMID 25877615. Retrieved 2022-05-08.
  57. ^ Garrison, Nanibaa' A. (March 2018). "Genetic Ancestry Testing with Tribes: Ethics, Identity & Health Implications". Daedalus. 147 (2): 60–69. doi:10.1162/DAED_a_00490. S2CID 57571035. "Despite advances in genetic tests' capacity to pinpoint ancestral relationships, none of the companies can definitively state that ancestral relationships are aligned with any particular tribe. No genetic tests can determine tribal affiliation, nor can they definitively prove Native American ancestry. As we have seen, the key reason behind these limits is simply that there are not enough data in the databases to make strong conclusions."
  58. ^ Suresh, Arvind (6 Oct 2016). "Native Americans fear potential exploitation of their DNA". Genetic Literacy Project. Archived from the original on November 23, 2021. Retrieved 7 Sep 2021.
  59. ^ Carey, Teresa L. (9 May 2019). "DNA tests stand on shaky ground to define Native American identity". National Human Genome Research Institute. Archived from the original on January 11, 2022. Retrieved 7 Sep 2021.
  60. Bryc 2015: "Previous studies have shown that African Americans in the US typically carry segments of DNA shaped by contributions from peoples of Europe, Africa, and the Americas, with variation in African and European admixture proportions across individuals and differences in groups across parts of the country.2–4 More recent studies that utilized high-density genotype data provide reliable individual ancestry estimates, illustrate the large variability in African and European ancestry proportions at an individual level, and are able to detect low proportions of Native American ancestry.3–11 Latinos across the Americas have differing proportions of Native American, African, and European genetic ancestry, shaped by local historical interactions with migrants brought by the slave trade, European settlement, and indigenous Native American populations.12–18 Individuals from countries across South America, the Caribbean, and Mexico have different profiles of genetic ancestry molded by each population’s unique history and interactions with local Native American populations.1,19–25 European Americans are often used as proxies for Europeans in genetic studies.26 European Americans, however, have a history of admixture of many genetically distinct European populations.27,28 Studies have shown that European Americans also have non-European ancestry, including African, Native American, and Asian, though it has been poorly quantified with some discordance among estimates even within studies.29–32"
  61. ^ "Two Native American geneticists interpret Elizabeth Warren's DNA test". ABC News. October 22, 2018. Retrieved January 31, 2023.
  62. ^ Geddes, Linda (5 February 2014). "'There is no DNA test to prove you're Native American'". New Scientist. Archived from the original on March 15, 2017. Retrieved 31 May 2019.
  63. ^ TallBear, Kim (2013). Native American DNA: Tribal-belonging and the false Promise of Genetic Science. pp. 132–136.
  64. ^ Marks, Jonathan. "Genetic "Markers"- Not a Valid Test of Native Identity". Indigenous People's Council on Biocolonialism. Archived from the original on 25 July 2008. Retrieved 2023-08-01.
  65. Raff, Jennifer (8 February 2022). Origin: A Genetic History of the Americas. Grand Central Publishing. p. 188. ISBN 978-1-5387-4970-8. "We know from later comparisons that the Mal'ta boys' people were direct descendants of the Ancient North Siberians from Yana (7). They were broadly ancestral to present day Eurasians. But in comparing his genome to present day populations from across the world, they found that he was also closely related to present day Native Americans; his population was directly ancestral to them. Mal'ta's population -- the ancient Northern Siberians, seems to have encountered the daughter East Asian population described at the beginning of this chapter around 25,000 years ago and interbred with them. Current estimates suggest that approximately 63% of the First Peoples' ancestry comes from the East Asian group and the rest from the Ancient North Siberians. We're not sure where this interaction took place. Some archaeologists believe that it occurred in East Asia, suggesting that this is where the Siberians moved during the LGM" "There's also a case to be made for this interaction having taken place bear the Lake Baikal region in Siberia from genetic evidence, too" "But other archaeologists and geneticists argue that the meeting of the two grandparent populations of Native Americans occurred because people moved north, not south, in response to the LGM"
  66. Bryc 2015: "We generated cohorts of self-reported European American, African American, and Latino individuals from self-reported ethnicity and identity. We obtained ancestry estimates from genotype data by using a Support Vector Machine-based algorithm that infers population ancestry with Native American, African, and European reference panels, leveraging geographic information collected through surveys (see Durand et al.33). For details on genotyping and ancestry deconvolution methods, see Subjects and Methods."
  67. Bryc, Katarzyna (January 2015). "The Genetic Ancestry of African Americans, Latinos, and European Americans across the United States". The American Journal of Human Genetics. 96 (1): 37–53. doi:10.1016/j.ajhg.2014.11.010. ISSN 0002-9297. PMC 4289685. PMID 25529636.
  68. Carl Zimmer (24 December 2014). "White? Black? A murky Distinction grows still murkier". The New York Times. Retrieved 21 October 2018. The researchers found that European-Americans had genomes that were on average 98.6 percent European, .19 percent African, and .18 Native American.
  69. Bryc 2015.
  70. ^ Fitzgerald, Kathleen J. (3 June 2020). Recognizing Race and Ethnicity: Power, Privilege, and Inequality. Routledge. ISBN 978-0-429-51440-1.
  71. Kim TallBear (2008). "Can DNA Determine Who is American Native American?". The WEYANOKE Association. Retrieved 2009-05-11.
  72. Tennant, Amie Bowser (9 February 2018). "Why Your DNA Results Didn't Show Your Native American Ancestry". The Genealogy Reporter. Archived from the original on 5 Dec 2018. Retrieved 28 May 2019.
  73. TallBear, Kim (17 Jan 2019). "Elizabeth Warren's claim to Cherokee ancestry is a form of violence - Be it by the barrel of a carbine or a mail-order DNA test, the American spirit demands the disappearance of Indigenous people". High Country News. Archived from the original on November 22, 2021. Retrieved 5 Nov 2019.
  74. ^ Zimmer, Carl (2018-10-15). "Elizabeth Warren Has a Native American Ancestor, But Does That Make Her Native American?". The New York Times. Archived from the original on 2019-03-14. Retrieved 2019-05-02.
  75. Tsosie, Krystal (2018-10-17). "What to Make of Elizabeth Warren's DNA Test". The Atlantic. Retrieved 2023-01-20.
  76. Levenson, Michael. "Is Elizabeth Warren's genetic test conclusive?". BostonGlobe.com. Archived from the original on 3 May 2019. Retrieved 13 May 2019.
  77. ^ Ruiz, Rebecca (17 October 2018). "What you should do if a DNA test suggests you're Native American". Mashable. Archived from the original on 2019-05-04. Retrieved 2019-05-02.
  78. Gupta, Prachi (16 October 2018). "'Our Vote Matters Very Little': Kim TallBear on Elizabeth Warren's Attempt to Claim Native American Heritage". Jezebel. Retrieved 29 March 2019.
  79. "Cherokee Nation > Home". Archived from the original on 2007-07-18. Retrieved 2017-03-06.
  80. "Disappearing Indians, Part II: The Hypocrisy of Race in Deciding Who's Enrolled - Indian Country Media Network". Archived from the original on 2017-09-22. Retrieved 2017-03-06.
  81. Perdue (2000), p. 564
  82. Perdue (2000), p. 564-565
  83. Thornton 2004
  84. "1956 Lumbee Act". University of North Carolina, Pembroke. Retrieved 13 July 2019.
  85. Karen I. Blu (1980). The Lumbee problem: the making of an American Indian people. University of Nebraska. ISBN 0803261977. Retrieved 2009-08-15.
  86. Houghton, p.750.
  87. Brownell (2001) p304
  88. ^ Barrett (2007)

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