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Mapping Citizenship: Status, Membership, and the Path in Between
Mapping Citizenship: Status, Membership, and the Path in Between

... all, in light of well-accepted notions of distributive justice, rights would be afforded based on indicators related to the right being distributed.6 In an ideal world, we would expect citizenship rules to identify individuals who are desirable members of the polity-however that might be defined-in ...
the territory of hawai`i, the american west, and american colonialism in
the territory of hawai`i, the american west, and american colonialism in

... Texas, it was unlikely that masses of city dwelling Americans would leave their homes for the expensive trip to Luzon for the purpose of working on plantations. Americans were lured to the West by the possibility of wealth and land in the past. Forcibly removing Native Americans was acceptable throu ...
Stockholm Studies in History 104  Ingela Sjögren
Stockholm Studies in History 104 Ingela Sjögren

... United States. Didn’t the Indians themselves see the contradiction in accusing the U.S. of genocide and then waving its flag? Did it mean that the Native Americans identified as being part of the United States, or apart from it, or perhaps both? And if they identified as both, how should these diffe ...
Reclaiming Indigenous Narratives through Critical Discourses and
Reclaiming Indigenous Narratives through Critical Discourses and

Journal of History and Social Science
Journal of History and Social Science

... that’s why were making this government, along with rules and laws. The General Courts of Connecticut and Massachusetts Bay granted authority for local government collectively to the people who established the town. In Connecticut, for example, John Wareham and Thomas Hooker put forth the Fundamental ...
United States Public Law 103-150
United States Public Law 103-150

... attachment to the land; Whereas, the long-range economic and social changes in Hawaii over the nineteenth and early twentieth centuries have been devastating to the population and to the health and well-being of the Hawaiian people; Whereas, the Native Hawaiian people are determined to preserve, dev ...
US History Chapter 6
US History Chapter 6

... There was a clear division in the nation between north and south demonstrated by the votes of the Electoral college. What was the XYZ Affair? French demanded a bribe before allowing American delegates to negotiate for the sovereignty of American shipping, a strong sign of the disrespect shown to the ...
MD through Sectionalism - Hicksville Public Schools
MD through Sectionalism - Hicksville Public Schools

... 12. In an outline, which main topic would include the other three? (1) Erie Canal (2) 19th-Century Internal Improvements (3) Transcontinental Railroad (4) National Road ...
Bell Ringer - North Penn School District
Bell Ringer - North Penn School District

... AMENDMENT ...
1

Native American civil rights

Native American civil rights are the civil rights of Native Americans in the United States. Because Native Americans are citizens of their tribal nations as well as the United States, and those tribal nations are characterized under U.S. law as ""domestic dependent nations"", a special relationship exists which creates a particular tension between rights granted via tribal sovereignty and rights that individual Natives retain as U.S. citizens. This status creates tension today, but was far more extreme before Native people were uniformly granted U.S. citizenship in 1924. Assorted laws and policies of the United States government, some tracing to the pre-Revolutionary colonial period, denied basic human rights—particularly in the areas of cultural expression and travel—to indigenous people.
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