User:Emma.Fagan/Native American peoples of Oregon/Bibliography

Pre-Columbian era

 * very little information to be found here...
 * small references to archaeological evidence, earliest habitation, language origin

Dispossession and the reservation system

 * Oregon Donation Land Act - gave land away BEFORE cession, 1850

Cession Treaties

 * 1850s: Willamette Valley Treaties (Kalapuya mainly)
 * specifically Kalapuya Treaty of 1855
 * Northeastern Oregon treaties (Walla Walla, Warm Springs, Umatilla, etc.)
 * One with Warm Springs and Wasco Tribes - large land cession
 * Coast Treaty yields Coast/Siletz Reservation - failed ratification? check on this

Reservations

 * Coast Indian Reservation - no longer exists, precursor to Grande Ronde and Siletz
 * Grande Ronde - established, terminated, reestablished and currently going strong
 * Warm Springs
 * Siletz?

Termination and re-recognition

 * 1954 - Congress passes Public Laws 587/588, indigenous nations no longer recognized west of the Cascades - intent was to free them from fed oversight??
 * look more into this/effects...what tribes/confederacies existed before this? which existed after? what were the legal battles, how did tribes regain status? WHY did the feds do this in the first place?
 * Re-recognition: Klamaths get it 1986; Cow Creek, Confederated Coos/Lower Umpqua/Siuslaw, and Coquilles establish selves as autonomous; Siletz and Grande Ronde confederations get back together? Burns Paiute? Warm Springs?

Native Americans in contemporary Oregon

 * How long have current tribes/confederations existed? What lands do they live on? Who has authority - what's the federal relationship here?
 * Oregon state governent's view of state-tribal relations
 * Nine federally-recognized tribes, government-to-government relations with Oregon Dept. of Forestry and Dept. of Enviro. Quality
 * look more into the government-to-government idea - when established?
 * as reported by tribal news: more on government-to-government and current relations
 * SENATE BILL 770 - 2001, established "formal legal government to government relationship" (Oregon first state to do so...in 2001) - source also includes list of Oregon tribes, definitions/descriptions of tribal government, other state/tribal policies
 * Gaming - economic boost, state influence/policies regulating it
 * Oregon Senate Bill 13 - 2017, enacts curriculum teaching "tribal history/shared history" in K-12 public schools, gives tribes funding to create place-based curriculum for each tribe