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What Does it Mean to be a Federally Recognized Tribe?

PBS Origins 116,637 3 months ago
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Check out Weathered: Earth's Extremes: https://to.pbs.org/WeatheredITM The 1830 Indian Removal Act led to the forced relocation of nearly 50,000 Indigenous people. What happened to the ones that stayed? Since then, some Native American tribes have struggled for federal recognition by the U.S. government. This episode explains the complex process a non-federally recognized Tribe must undergo to gain federal recognition and highlights southern Alabama’s state-recognized MOWA Band of Choctaws' ongoing fight. To learn more about federal recognition, visit: https://www.teenvogue.com/story/tribes-not-federally-recognized PBS Member Stations rely on viewers like you. To support your local station, go to: http://to.pbs.org/DonateORIG Check out more from our host Harini Bhat on @tilscience! Subscribe to PBS Origins so you never miss an episode! ⇨ @pbsorigins And keep up with PBS Origins on: ⇨Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/PBSDigitalStudios/ ⇨Twitter/X: https://x.com/PBSDS ⇨Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/pbsds/ IN THE MARGINS is produced by Alabama Public Television, PBS Utah, and WHYY for PBS. This program was produced by Alabama Public Television, which is solely responsible for its content. 0:00 Fight for federal recognition 1:30 What is federal recognition? 2:00 BIA process Explained 7:39 Indian Removal Act / Trail of Tears 9:00 How segregation affects recognition 10:27 State Recognition 12:09 BIA Process Change / Future of Recognition 14:52: Weathered Earth's Extremes Other Resources: ⇨ They Say the Wind Is Red: The Alabama Choctaw ― Lost in Their Own Land by Jacqueline Anderson Matte ⇨ “If You Are Not at the Table, You Are on the Menu”: Lumbee Government Strategies under State Recognition by Danielle V. Hiraldo #TristonHarper #AmericanIdol #NativeAmerican #FederalRecognition #History #AmericanHistory #TrailofTears #IndianRemoval #InTheMargins

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