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Bureau of Indian Affairs Federal Acknowledgement Decision Compilation v 2.0 -
(Bureau of Indian Affairs; converted and posted by Indianz.com).
From the article
by Indianz.com about this database:
"The database is an online
version of the Acknowledgment Decision Compilation (ADC), a record of
documents that the Bureau of Indian Affairs
has on file for dozens of groups that have made it through the
federal recognition process."
A previous
version (1.2) of the database and an
article
about that version are available at Indianz.com also.
Code
of Federal Regulations - (U.S. Government Printing
Office). Parts 81-83 in Title 25, Chapter 1. Using the April 2005 edition,
scroll down to Part 81 - Tribal reorganization under a Federal statute; Part
82 - Petitioning procedures for tribes reorganized under Federal statute and
other organized tribes; and Part
83 - Procedures for establishing that an American Indian group exists as an
Indian tribe.
Directories
of federally-recognized and state-recogized
tribes.
(2008)
List of Federally Recognized Tribes -
From the Federal Register,
April 4, 2008 notice titled: "Indian
Entities Recognized and Eligible To
Receive Services From the United States
Bureau of Indian Affairs; Notice." 73 FR 18553;
Federal Register / Vol. 73, No. 66
/ Friday, April 4, 2008 / Notices
Copy in PDF format
"Memorandum:
Government-to-Government Relations With Native American Tribal Governments" -
(Available at the National Park Service web site). President
Bill Clinton, 59 Fed. Reg. 22951 (April 29, 1994).
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A selection of free federal Indian and tribal law secondary resources on the
Internet.
State-recognition
article:
"Federalism and the State Recognition
of Native American Tribes: A Survey
of State-Recognized Tribes and State
Recognition Processes Across the United
States," Alexa Koenig, University
of San Francisco
Go to the Online Catalog
Federal recognition has many synonyms and related topics:
acknowledgment, reorganization, status clarification, and restoration
of status due to termination, for example. Use these words (and their various
forms) in any field.
Federal acknowledgment documents may include petitions,
hearings, anthropological reports, and more. Recognition may have been discussed
or granted through a Bill or an Act.
Indian Law
Bulletins (all)
Jurisdiction
Sovereignty
Index of
current NARF cases (see the section titled "Federal Recognition
of Tribal Status")
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