Wednesday, October 14, 2009

Conditional Governance: Native American Indian [2001-2008]- Crossing of Boundaries

The Native American Indian were routed through a series of Acts in an effort to get the series of acculturation completed through a degree of wanted phases by the then, Federal government; however, the real result was the process of assimilation which became obvious as an process of change and leadership inversion.

With the Dawes Act, the male Native American found themselves being forced into farming rather than hunting, which was a mainstay for their survival for a long period of their history.

Acculuration may be the hope for the young Native American citizen of the United States, and yet, there are several pathways that as a group of educated members of society, we can proceed in this effort. One is to know the environment which is available to the young and the elder of the Native American citizenry. For these conditions one needs to go into the individual's psyche, and also as a group of functionals who are being undermined by the external environment in an fiscal way as well as a political, sociological and environmental manner in that there entire system of governance is being overturned and secluded in the aspects of power and strength in their vitality and functionality.

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