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The National Congress of American Indians

The National Congress of American Indians

The Founding Years

by Thomas W Cowger

Founded in 1944, the National Congress of American Indians is one of the most important intertribal political organizations of the twentieth century. It has played a crucial role in stimulating Native political awareness and activism, providing a forum for debates on vital issues affecting reservations and tribes, overseeing litigation efforts, and organizing lobbying activities in Washington. Prior to the emergence of other intertribal political groups in the 1960s, the NCAI was the primary political instrument for Native lobbying and resistance. It fought against government efforts to terminate the reservation system, worked to create the Indian Claims Commission, protected the rights of Alaskan Natives, and secured voting and Social Security rights for Native peoples. The NCAI continues today, as in the past, to steer a moderate political course, bringing together and representing a wide range of Native peoples.

This is the first full-length history of the National Congress of American Indians. Drawing upon newly available NCAI records, Thomas W. Cowger tells the story of the founding and critical first two decades of this important organization. He presents the many accomplishments of and great challenges to the NCAI, examines its role in the development of Native political activism, and explores its relationships to contemporaneous events such as the Cold War, McCarthyism, and the civil rights movement.

Thomas W. Cowger is an assistant professor of history at East Central University in Ada, Oklahoma. His articles have appeared in American Indian Culture and Research Journal.

227 pp ~ illustrated — ©1999

 

 

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8080-321-502 hardcover $50.00 $42.50 $7.50 Buy
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ISBN: 0803215029
CATEGORY: Sociology
UNIV OF NEBRASKA PR
October 1999
 
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