Federal policy, western movement, and consequences for indigenous people, 1790-1920

David E. Wilkins

Research output: Chapter in Book/Report/Conference proceedingChapter

3 Scopus citations

Abstract

In virtually every respect imaginable — economic, political, cultural, sociological, psychological, geographical, and technological — the years from the creation of the United States through the Harding administration brought massive upheaval and transformation for native nations. Everywhere, U.S. Indian law (federal and state) — by which I mean the law that defines and regulates the nation’s political and legal relationship to indigenous nations — aided and abetted the upheaval. The nature of U.S. Indian law is, of course, fundamentally different from the various indigenous legal and customary traditions that encompassed the social norms, values, customs, and religious views of native nations. These two fundamentally distinct legal cultures, and their diverse practitioners and purveyors, were thus frequently in conflict. Important moments of recognition, however, did take place, particularly the early treaty period (1600s—1800), and later, there were infrequent, spasms of U.S. judicial recognition. In <italic>Ex parte Crow Dog</italic> (1883) and <italic>Talton v. Mayes</italic>(1896), for example, the U.S. Supreme Court acknowledged the distinctive sovereign status of native nations by holding that the U.S. Constitution did not constrain the inherent rights of Indian nations because their sovereignty predated that of the United States. Perhaps the period of greatest European acceptance occurred during the encounter era when indigenous practices of law and peace, particularly among the tribal nations of the Northeast, served as a broad philosophical and cultural paradigm for intergovernmental relations between indigenous peoples and the various European and Euro-American diplomats and policymakers with whom they interacted. Whether tribal, based in indigenous custom and tradition, or Western, based in English common law custom and tradition, law speaks to the basic humanity of individuals and societies.

Original languageEnglish (US)
Title of host publicationThe Cambridge History of Law in America
Subtitle of host publicationVolume II the Long Nineteenth Century (1789-1920)
PublisherCambridge University Press
Pages204-244
Number of pages41
ISBN (Electronic)9781139054188
ISBN (Print)9780521803069
DOIs
StatePublished - Jan 1 2008

Bibliographical note

Publisher Copyright:
© Cambridge University Press 2008.

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