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New York State's Montaukett were terminated in 1918 due to a court case called Pharoah v. Benson.
Pharoah v. Benson wasn't part of the BIA's termination policy from the middle of the 20th century, but it was a tribal termination. The tribe was previously recognized by the federal government; there's a reference to this in a BIA document (which I would need to dig up to show, unfortunately).
There are multiple branches of the tribe (which is why there's a Montauk tribe and a Montaukett tribe listed). But this has to do with claims to leadership.
Late to the conversation but why is seeking recognition a caveat? The groups have to be notable enough for reliable sources but I don't understand why seeking recognition would matter. If it was, many of these groups have long stopped actively seeking recognition since they have been soundly denied. Yuchitown (talk) 01:32, 28 June 2021 (UTC)Yuchitown[reply]
A user added the White Bear Clan of North and South Carolina as an unrecognized tribe, without providing any reference. There was/is a White Bear Clan in the Tuscarora tribe, which is attested among the Tuscarora that moved north. The clan apparently was created in the early 18th century for a couple of white women who had been adopted into the tribe.[1][2] A recent source indicates that at least some Tuscarora regard the White Bear Clan as illegitimate.[3] I gather that some Tuscaroras may have stayed in the Carolinas, but without retaining tribal cohesion. I do not know whether any Tuscarora who remained in the Carolinas belonged to the White Bear Clan. In any case, without any source that the White Bear Clan has any actual existance, I removed the edit. - Donald Albury01:18, 28 June 2021 (UTC)[reply]
References
^Wallace, Anthony F. C. (May 16, 1949). "The Tuscaroras: Sixth Nation of the Illinois Confederacy". Proceedings of the American Philosophical Society. 93: 162. JSTOR31433435.
Ramapough Mountain Indians/Ramapough Lenape are one of NJ's three state recognized tribes[edit]
The entry on the Ramapough is inaccurate and should be removed- they are one of New Jersey's 3 state recognized tribes, (along with the Nanticoke Lenape and the Powhatan Renape). They also continue to have representatives on the state's Commission of American Indian Affairs as a result of that status. (Ramapough Mountain Indians is another name for the same tribal government)
Listing alleged details of their Federal Recognition process while ignoring their New Jersey State Recognition is a misleading non sequitur, since the list is only supposed to contain tribes that have no recognition at all.
There were controversial attempts under Governor Christie to delist all three tribes without due process or consultation with the state's Commission on American Indian Affairs, but the state formally rejected this move and in 2019 NJ Attorney General Gurbir Grewal reaffirmed the other 2 tribes following a major court settlement with the Nanticoke Lenni-Lenape to address harms they experienced from Christie's actions. The Ramapough were been acknowledged as having uninterrupted recognition as "American Indian Tribes recognized by the State,” [1] (of New Jersey) since 1980.
Some relevant sources from the New Jersey government and official statements to the press.
I moved the following material from the article to this talk for discussion:
These tribes can be controversial, and vary greatly in terms of the rigor of their claims to indigeneity. While many of these tribes are considered fraudulent, many still have legitimate claims but are unable to gain recognition due to racial purity laws, which prevented their ancestors from being recorded as Native American, thereby removing the possibility of applying for federal recognition[2]. Tribes originating in states which have both historic racial purity laws, and current policies against recognizing tribes at the state level are in a particularly difficult position, as state recognition is often seen as a pre-requisite to federal recognition[3].
This statement is misleading since any group can apply for federal recognition; despite Virginia having misleading censuses that did not allow people to identify as being American Indian, Virginia tribes have successfully gained recognition through the formal acknowledgment process (Pamunkey) and through congressional legislation. While some people do mistakenly believe state recognition is somehow related to federal recognition, they are totally independent, since states determine their own processes for recognition; there's no uniformity. While not mentioned in the editorial comment above, the main point of the cited article is that "racial purity specifically requires the demonstrable absence of African-American ancestry." That racist perspective is not part of the criteria for federal recognition (nor is blood quantum unless the tribe itself requires it), and many tribes with significant African-American ancestry have gained federal recognition (including the Pequot, Mashpee Wampanoag, Aquinnah Wampanoag, Shinnecock, and Augustine Cahuilla).
Because there is so much misinformation out there, here are the current seven criteria for federal recognition as a Native American tribe:
being an American Indian entity since at least 1900
a predominant part of the group forms a distinct community and has done so throughout history into the present
holding political influence over its members
having governing documents including membership criteria
members having ancestral descent from historic American Indian tribes
not being members of other existing federally recognized tribes
not being previously terminated by the U.S. Congress.[4]
This is correct for tribes that apply to the BIA, not so for those who go straight to Congress or the courts to win federal acknowledgement. The tribes you list above include several that skipped the BIA altogether and simply won the votes in Congress necessary to get a law passed that put them on equal footing with all the other federally "recognized" tribes. There's a long list of tribes that went that way, before and after the existence of the BIA. I put the term in quotations because the official term in the Office of Federal Acknowledgement (OFA) of the BIA is acknowledgement, not recognition. OFA goes to great length to explain that what the federal government does is acknowledge a tribe's existence, not create one through an action of recognition. All references to recognition in this talk should be replaced with acknowledgement. The nuance might be too fine for the average reader, but it makes a big difference in the direction of the conversation. For among other things, the term recognition misinforms the reader that the US federal government and, for that matter, states can create an American Indian tribe. Tsideh (talk) 16:16, 9 January 2024 (UTC)[reply]
While this list should be as inclusive as possible, unfortunately, the group Conestoga-Susquehannock Tribe doesn't appear in any published material, and using its own website as a citation could be viewed as promotional, so I removed them from the list and am mentioning them here in case they appear in a secondary, published source in the near future. Yuchitown (talk) 17:47, 27 November 2022 (UTC)Yuchitown[reply]
^Newland, Bryan (27 November 2022). "Federal Tribal Recognition". Office of Congressional and Legislative Affairs. US Department of the Interior. Retrieved 23 November 2021.
Isn't there a distinction between Native American heritage groups in a broad sense and groups claiming statusidentifying as a tribe? For instance, here is a (incomplete) list of organizations that could be regarded as Native American heritage groups, but do not claimidentify as having tribal status. - Donald Albury 16:08, 18 February 2023 (UTC) Edited to use more neutral language. Donald Albury23:19, 18 February 2023 (UTC)[reply]
Agree we could use a rename. "Unrecognized tribes" is POV, as it names the groups as tribes, who just lack status. Some might meet some criteria, but many simply do not and never will. Some are blatant scammers. Similarly, some heritage groups consist of people with actual heritage, who do not seek to disrupt tribal sovereignty or change citizenship standards. Other groups that claim heritage have none are very disruptive. We would do best to not lump them all together. Perhaps List of groups that self-identify as Native American tribes?
I think trying to distinguish legitimate from non-legitimate groups would get messy in a hurry, with reliable sources being very scarce for judging the legitimacy of many groups. Donald Albury01:53, 7 August 2023 (UTC)[reply]
The goal would be to generate neutral name that encompasses every group on the list based on what can be readily verified, which is that they are all organizations and they all identify as being Native American tribes but are not recognized by the US or any states. Calling all of them “tribes” is a leap of faith that is not verifiable. Yuchitown (talk) 02:18, 7 August 2023 (UTC)Yuchitown[reply]
But reliable sources on legitimacy are not "very scarce". It really isn't "muddy" if you're familiar with the field. There are legal definitions for what constitutes an Indian tribe in the US. Yuchi probably has the links and sources handy. The few that might fall in a legitimately disputed area, we can discuss. Best wishes, - CorbieVreccan☊☼18:22, 7 August 2023 (UTC)[reply]
I think it should be either "organizations" or "groups" because not all of them are incorporated. I have a slight preference for "that self-identify as" over "self-identifying as" because it lines up a bit better with the format of the other cats we have. I think. But you do more work with cats so I'll go with whatever everyone prefers. - CorbieVreccan☊☼02:06, 9 August 2023 (UTC)[reply]
We could do "Organizations" but I'm trying to keep it less wordy, and "groups" might be more inclusive of less-formal, unincorporated groups? - CorbieVreccan☊☼22:59, 8 August 2023 (UTC)[reply]
Organizations seems much more commonly throughout Wikipedia used for people joining on a project, as opposed to "groups." And there's a WikiProject Organizations. It seems broad enough to encompass every entry on this list. You are right that "that self-identify" is better grammar. And just a general caveat, certain entries on this list are absolutely historic Native American organizations, so the name change is just broadening to accurately include those that are not. Wikipedia has no room for WP:OR.
I suggest leaving "unrecognized" out of the title as slightly shorter and simpler, and link to 'List of federally recognized tribes in the contiguous United States' and 'State-recognized tribes in the United States' at the top of the list. Donald Albury17:17, 9 August 2023 (UTC)[reply]
One challenge is that removing "unrecognized" would not distinguish this article from State-recognized tribes. I don't believe anyone wants to broaden the scope of this article to encompass them. Yuchitown (talk) 17:42, 9 August 2023 (UTC)Yuchitown[reply]
Wouldn't linking to 'State-recognized tribes in the United States' work for excluding them from the list? Maybe leave out "in the United States" from the name. Again, a shorter and simpler name for the list. Details can always be explained in the lead. Something like:
Many organizations self-identify as Native American tribes or heritage groups. For organizations that are recognized by the government of the United States as Native American tribes, see [[List of federally recognized tribes in the contiguous United States]]. For organizations that are recognized by the government of one of the states as Native American tribes, see [[State-recognized tribes in the United States]]. Other organizations that self-identify as Native American that have not been recognized by the government of the United States or by any state government are listed below.Donald Albury19:06, 9 August 2023 (UTC)[reply]
Basically sounds good. Slight line edit and compression. I still think we should use "groups" as it includes the less formal orgs. But if the consensus is for "organizations" I'm ok with it.:
Groups that self-identify as Native American Tribes
This is a list of groups that self-identify as Native American tribes or heritage groups, but have not been recognized as tribes by the established Native American tribes, or by the Federal or State governments.
Sounds good. Is there a way to list groups that have been recognized by established tribes, but not by states or the Federal government? Or could that just be noted in their entries in this list? Donald Albury21:08, 10 August 2023 (UTC)[reply]
Some tribes are enrolled with larger tribes. But I don't believe there is an official means of established tribes to recognized an unrecognized tribe. The State of California has a list of Native American tribes and organizations with which it consults, which is informed by Native American advisors, but this list is not publicly published. Yuchitown (talk) 21:40, 10 August 2023 (UTC)Yuchitown[reply]
We have articles where we've sourced statements from federally-recognized tribes who have had to form task forces to deal with fraudulent orgs committing identity theft and other crimes. It's acknowledging tribal sovereignty, and that Indigenous people have the final say on who is Native, not the US or State governments. Sometimes state gov'ts give recognition to frauds. Frauds will often say they don't want to enroll, "because they don't trust the US government". But it's the tribes who decide, not members of the non-Native governments. - CorbieVreccan☊☼22:55, 10 August 2023 (UTC)[reply]
Organization that self-identify as Native American Tribes
These organizations self-identify as Native American tribes or heritage groups, but have not been recognized as tribes by the established Native American tribes, or by the Federal or State governments.
I found these names hidden in a note under "Arkansas"; however, several of these don't appear to be from Arkansas. I'm placing them here until they can be cited and entered under the appropriate state. Yuchitown (talk) 16:55, 12 March 2023 (UTC)Yuchitown
"Accused as "Suspected Fraudulent Organizations" by American Indian Heritage Support Center; check if unrecognized or fraudulent:[reply]
American Metis Aboriginal Association Lodge
The Bear Clan Society of Arkansas
Wolf Clan Society of Arkansas
United Lumbee Nation of North Carolina and America, Arkansas Red Wolf American Native Band
United Metis Tribe"
Ocali Nation is listed as a "pseudo-tribe" here. It is no. 15 under Florida in this list. They seem to be playing off of Ocale, which was last heard of in the 17th century. - Donald Albury02:01, 13 March 2023 (UTC)[reply]
Right on, thank you! I deleted that. And "Turtle Island" is so vague that whatever organization may have used that term will likely be never found, so I deleted that too. Yuchitown (talk) 02:07, 13 March 2023 (UTC)Yuchitown[reply]
In the intro, I edited it to say, "Most of these organizations are not accepted as being Native American by established Native American tribes," because there are historic tribes in California who signed treaties that were never ratified, and then while most terminated tribes regained their federal recognition (or at least state-recognition with the Chinook Indian Tribe), quite a few in California have yet to do so. So neighboring tribes do acknowledge these people as being Native American. Yuchitown (talk) 19:19, 12 August 2023 (UTC)Yuchitown[reply]
Groups that have acknowledgment from federally recognized comminutes.[edit]
What about groups that have acknowledgement and community from federally recognized tribes? Why are people clumping them with fake heritage groups? If they are recognized by real tribes, I think a distinction should be made next to the tribal group. I added next to the Lipan Apache Tribe of Texas that they have been recognized by Apache tribes, like for example, by (at the time) Chairwoman Gwendena Lee of the White Mountain Apache tribe, and Terry Rambler of the San Carlos Apache Tribe and have made community with other Apache tribal leaders who acknowledge them. They were invited and attend the private Apache Alliance Summit meetings as well as ceremony, showing that they have ties and community with federal recognized tribes. Should more texts like those be put next to the tribal group so people can know they aren't fraudulent? Thank you. Madigoosh (talk) 07:36, 19 December 2023 (UTC)[reply]
I'm not talking about state-recognition, I'm talking about how the tribe has acknowledgment and community with tribes who recognize them as Apache and are accepted and considered Apache by Apache tribal leaders. What about them? The fact that they are considered Apache should be known. Madigoosh (talk) 11:18, 20 December 2023 (UTC)[reply]
Madigoosh has a valid point. Although factually wrong that a tribe can only be recognized by a state through state law, the Lipan Apache Tribe of Texas has also been recognized by established federally recognized tribes in the Apache Alliance and in their membership in the two organizations that include federally recognized tribes: the National Congress of American Indians and the Alliance of Colonial Era Tribes. Therefore, it is inaccurate to include the Lipan Apache Tribe of Texas in this list whose article description states that it for tribes that “have not been recognized as independent tribes by the established Native American tribes" Fallenacorn (talk) 18:44, 28 December 2023 (UTC)[reply]
Yes, I agree that the parameter "have not been recognized as independent tribes by the established Native American tribes" is not cited and does not apply to every single organization in the list. I struck that and left only the verifiable and objective parameters in the lede: These organizations, located within the United States, self-identify as Native American tribes or heritage groups, but they are not federally recognized tribes or state-recognized tribes. The goal is to be as neutral and objective as possible. Additional information about a specific group can always be added to that group's article. Yuchitown (talk) 21:09, 28 December 2023 (UTC)Yuchitown[reply]
The removed parameter is found in two other places in the introduction to this wikipage, even if it was struck out from the first sentence. If this is a list of “unrecognize groups claiming to be American Indian tribes”, then the “established Native American tribes,” “recognized Indigenous nations,” or “tribal government” parameter should stay, because federally acknowledged tribes are sovereign nations that can establish their own relationships. It is relevant if they identify and accept a community of people as being an American Indian tribe. Such a group then does not just self-identify or claim to be an American Indian tribe. Fallenacorn (talk) 00:25, 31 December 2023 (UTC)[reply]
I suggest engaging in discussion of keeping the third parameter "have not been recognized as independent tribes by the established Native American tribe," in the first sentence of this page and not just in two other places further on in the article. Fallenacorn (talk) 19:49, 31 December 2023 (UTC)[reply]
Fallenacorn is right, do you plan on correcting this topic in the wiki next to the Lipan Apache Tribe of Texas, since you can make valid distinctions for Californian tribes? Madigoosh (talk) 06:47, 1 January 2024 (UTC)[reply]
I would love for other established editors to join this conversation. This list includes organizations commonly regarded as legitimate and others regarded as fraudulent. What is objectively known, verifiable, and coming from a neutral point of view is that all of these U.S.-based organizations are neither federally nor state-recognized tribes. You are welcome to mention on the organization's article that they attended the Apache Alliance Summit, but attending a meeting doesn't belong here, and in 2021 the Apache Alliance included nine Apache tribes, all federally recognized. You are drawing conclusions that are not reflected in secondary, published literature. Please read up on WP:PROMO, WP:COI, WP:OR, and WP:SOCKPUPPETRY. Yuchitown (talk) 02:04, 5 January 2024 (UTC)Yuchitown[reply]
On adding the third parameter back in this first sentence; reliable published sources support this form of recognition by established tribes. Fallenacorn (talk) 05:26, 5 January 2024 (UTC)[reply]
I believe “There are three ways that Native American tribes are acknowledged in the United States: federal recognition, state recognition, or recognition by established tribes” is appropriately defined and cited. Kilnarak (talk) 07:42, 9 January 2024 (UTC)[reply]
As I said, context is important if you're claiming a tribe as fraudulent or not recognized by federally recognized tribes. It belongs here if you claim things such as that, and not drawing conclusions as you claim others are. As you also must've not read or seen, the Lipan Apache Tribe of Texas attend the meetings annually, and meet up with leaders on a constant basis, showing a clear support for each other. So if you can make distinctions on certain tribes, you should be able to do it for them given the facts provided as no one is claiming they are state or federally recognized, just recognized by acknowledged tribes. Either that, or do not claim the tribes listed are not acknowledged by federal recognized tribes. Madigoosh (talk) 19:09, 5 January 2024 (UTC)[reply]
There is no basis for continuing to force these changes into the article. The NCAI can not be considered an independent and reliable source to make such a claim that they are recognized by established tribes. What would be is if any established tribes directly recognized these heritage groups and self-identifying tribes as such. Thus far that has not been provided. I oppose these changes without verifiable evidence such exists. --ARoseWolf18:31, 9 January 2024 (UTC)[reply]
This conversation is being had at the Lipan Apache people page, so there's no need for a repeat here. I just replied to you over there. Madigoosh (talk) 14:01, 10 January 2024 (UTC)[reply]
Beg your pardon but this is a separate issue from that discussion. An acknowledgement that they attended a summit is not acknowledgement they have been recognized by established tribes. Neither source you provided there specifically said this organization's claims are recognized and verified or you would have included that and this issue would have been resolved for that organization. All that can be verified is that they attended the summit. --ARoseWolf14:56, 10 January 2024 (UTC)[reply]
@User:Yuchitown I just realized there isn't a page or category for self-identifying groups in Canada. Do you think there might be enough content to do that in the future and what page title would you recommend? Thank you. Bohemian Baltimore (talk) 12:20, 1 January 2024 (UTC)[reply]
@Yuchitown I wanted to create an article about the "Mikinaks" in Quebec. I can't find a Canadian "Federal Register" listing Indigenous tribes. Nor can I find their official website or any non-profit registration info for the "Mikinaks". Bohemian Baltimore (talk) 19:15, 9 January 2024 (UTC)[reply]
I also noted there's not a page for groups that identify as Indian tribes who aren't recognized in Mexico, Guatemala, Brazil, Bolivia, etc. Like Organización Maya K’iche from Massachusetts. I should think you want to consider organizations like these cuz there's lot's more self-individuals in the US that come from them. Tsideh (talk) 22:17, 21 January 2024 (UTC)[reply]
Alert: Objectivity / an organized group imposing a fringe narrative on minority groups?/ recent significant and broad cluster editing activity / distortions and erasures of group history and bio pages of minoritized ("non-recognized") Native American peoples and notable persons[edit]
Re: "There are three ways that Native American tribes are acknowledged in the United States: federal recognition, state recognition, or recognition by established tribes."
Suggested edit: Currently, there are four broadly recognized social-political dynamics defining the internal acknowledgement (i.e. "recognition") of Native American tribal peoples ("Tribes") resourced by the United States government's system of federal acknowledgement and politically positioned within the U.S. "nation-to-nation" relationship with Indigenous peoples and the many independent Indigenous tribal communities who are not formally resourced by the United States, do not have formal nation-to-nation procedures or mechanisms, are, by self-definition, of places and territories occupied by the United States. Recognition of Indigenous peoples in various forms have evolved unevenly under systemic and structural conditions of historical race codifications enacted by multiple colonial European nations and their successor settler colonial governments. Native American tribes and federally non-recognized Indigenous peoples, codified as a binary into the United States' Western legal framework, experience on-going colonizations, differently, resulting in complex intra- and inter-group disparities, inequities and fractious politics enacted by the United States internally and between Indigenous peoples. These categories of recognition relevant to the debates on Indigenous self-identification are, but not limited to: federal recognition, state recognition, recognition by federally recognized tribes, and self-recognition.
@FactBanquet, as an editor who has only made one edit, how did you happen to find this talk page discussion out of the millions of articles on WP? Did someone ask you to comment here, or do you have any other accounts? Netherzone (talk) 17:45, 9 January 2024 (UTC)[reply]
Respectfully, isn't the point of this talk to generate as wide as possible discussion among all the interested parties to ensure a well-informed consensus? Fewer the folks that contribute to it, the greater chance that what stays up in WP is bad information? That I know of, there's only one forum for reaching an informed consensus on this question, and it's not WP: International Indian Treaty Council (IITC). They've been invited to join because what this page contradicts the only broadly-reached consensus on the question of recognition. One of IITC's guiding principles is "...that while sharing much in common, each Indigenous culture is also unique and each struggle reflects diverse historical conditions. Therefore in keeping with the principles of self-determination, the IITC respects the right of each member Nation, community and organization to define and pursue the objectives and strategies best suited to its specific situation, history and culture." https://www.iitc.org/about-iitc/guiding-principles/. The argument that government recognition is the key to a tribe being deemed a fraud or not goes against decades of very thoughtful and learned people from hundreds of tribes, US-based and otherwise, debating this very point in a transparent and inclusive forum where it was concluded that governmental recognition is categorically wrong as a criteria for tribal identity. That the principle of self-determination, which is key to every tribe's identity, ultimately means that all tribes are self-identifying. And the decision to seek or not US recognition is a matter solely of their choosing. This consensus was memorialized in the UN Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples UNDRIP.
I haven't tried to edit this page because I think it'll take wholesale re-writing, not just a few corrections, to get "recognition" right. For in its current version, your definition of recognition is an extremely narrow view of the term in the context of Indigenous identity. Maybe what the defenders of this page are saying is that there's an emerging new point of view. OK. Let's start there. Incoming the reader on this emerging new view point on recognition is good to put up on WP. Perhaps a statement at the very top of the page saying something to the effect that, "Although the current definition of recognition of Indian tribes as resolved by the UN in 2007 UNb, there is an emerging new definition put forth by______, that says national government is fundamental for tribal identity.... " Of course, this is going to have to be backed up with a citation from the forum or organization that says it.
WP, the existence of this page in its current version and the 2-3 (maybe more) others it props up to suggest that x, y, z tribes are lesser than or fake misinforms the reader by, among other things, telling them that there's not already a well-established consensus on the meaning of recognition.Tsideh (talk) 21:42, 21 January 2024 (UTC)[reply]
Wikipedia does not put forward "new" ways of "recognition" as you say. What you did was canvass an outside organization to edit war and influence what is on Wikipedia. Wikipedia is its own entity with its own rules and policies. The essay that was linked by Netherzone was long discussed and carefully written by Indigenous voices and those who support these topics on Wikipedia. While we welcome new voices to become involved, others that have been brought to this article from the very canvassing that took place have tried to edit war the non-neutral POV that you, and others, hold into this article. It's not just affecting this article either. It's spreading to others on the encyclopedia. This not the way to get things done here. Consensus of what goes on Wikipedia is not made by anything or anyone off Wikipedia. We do take into consideration anything reliable sources say on the subject but consensus is made on Wikipedia by Wikipedia editors in good standing. Several editors canvassed here have been found to be Sockpuppets and were blocked from editing because of this. Those editors are not in good standing. We also scrutinize editors who come here for the sole purpose of influencing their contentious POV into Wikipedia which is not overwhelmingly supported by current Wikipedia consensus or current reliable sources on the matter. --ARoseWolf13:12, 22 January 2024 (UTC)[reply]
I am new to Wikipedia, admittedly. My general subject matter interests are forensic architecture, source alerts, pseudononymous partisanship, technological modeling of persuasion goals in social media, persuasion theory statistics, citizen decision-makng, expert status, public approval, alert structure variables, platform architecture, algorithm and partisan behaviors, and technological interventions. Following the coding method outlined in Sadiq Muhammed and Saji K. Matthew, article in Int J Data Sci Anal 2022, 13(4): 271-285, I was originally drawn to the keyword "pretendian" in Twitter (2021), that came up in my feed, and its algorithm architecture and characteristics. I migrated to follow the Russia-Ukraine conflict, as much discussed in key rhetoric and linguistic studies on source alerts and disinformation. A few months, back, "pretendian" appeared on my feed again, and I followed it to Wikipedia. This page had a flurry of activity. I'm interested in theories of advanced linguistic forensic analysis and computational detection systems, and more a reader and learner, and here and there, I make attempts to engage. In my free time, in bits here and there, I'm teaching myself Wikipedia editing (as a productive exercise for mTBI), following the guidelines for newbys. I'm not a deep diver. More a social butterfly and fluttering on my path on topics with energetic talk pages. FactBanquet (talk) 04:05, 22 January 2024 (UTC)[reply]
Indeed, recognition by other tribes is "not a thing" if you're talking about eligibility for US federal government services. But the discussion here seems to be much broader and about recognition as a tribe in general (i.e. by society, WP readers, other tribes, etc).
But take the first question, even the OFA-BIA allows that a tribe may in fact exist without federal or state recognition. The whole point of applying for federal acknowledgement is about proving that pre-existing fact. Consider the circular reasoning that you can't apply for federal acknowledgement unless you're already recognized by the federal government. Recognition/acknowledgement by other tribes is precisely the kind of documentation you would submit to prove criteria 1&2 (historical legacy and identity as a distinct entity).
On the second and much bigger question, consider what's been written on the subject of Indian identity as applied to Canadian tribes. Can anybody truly argue that somebody who's moved to the US from, say, Yellow Knife or Otovalo cannot claim to be an American Indian because, er, they don't have a CDIB? That 1992 Noble Prize winner Rigoberta Menchu, let alone the vast majority of American Indians in the world, are non-Indians who self-identify? Tsideh (talk) 20:39, 9 January 2024 (UTC)[reply]
No, Yuchitown is saying it does not exist as a subject on Google, it has no reliable sources which define it and provide for what parameters define it as a reality. We would need the established tribes to directly state the recognition of these specifically named groups. We don't have that, therefore the main criteria for inclusion in Wiki-voice can not be met, verification. It is therefore WP:OR and can not be included as fact. --ARoseWolf21:01, 9 January 2024 (UTC)[reply]
That something's on Google is a thing? No scholar will accept that somebody not being able to find something on Google as proof of anything. That said, OFA-BIA comes up on Google just fine. Tsideh (talk) 21:57, 9 January 2024 (UTC)[reply]
You are missing the point. Wikipedia doesn't care that the OFI-BIA says they can exist. It's not Wikipedia policy that if they can exist we must allow their claims to be stated in Wiki-voice as fact. There must be reliable sources to verify the specific claim for that organization. The source must say "organization x is descended from y tribe", or something to that affect, not may, not we think, not claims to be. The policy is to prevent Wikipedia from being the source legitimizing claims. Wikipedia is an encyclopedia, a tertiary source. Our readers have to be able to verify what is written on our articles with as much certainty we can give them. I would love to discuss further and give you more understanding of Wikipedia but you are exhibiting classic WP:IDHT behavior as you have been told this very thing multiple times. --ARoseWolf12:42, 10 January 2024 (UTC)[reply]
Brother, I understand Wikipedia's conventions. Note that I've not touched any of your pages yet. I also understand that this whole discussion is about what "exists" means. No? You say it can only mean an org that makes you eligible for a CDIB, which no scholar says BTW (please prove me wrong if I am). That reliable sources have to be those that keep with this thread of thinking, like what scholarly source says recognition by an acknowledged tribe or anything short of BIA recognition is a thing. Others have proffered an extra criteria. Your crew has rejected it and so far is dominating the consensus. I contend there's other, better criteria and that the conversation is entirely askew if it starts from Indian self-determination being delegated to the occupying government (I'm peer-reviewed published on this very subject). So does the UN., among others. Countering that the UN resolution on Indigenous Self-determination is a more appropriate criteria for determining if a tribe is fake or not is fair under WP (and would probably invite a lot more amens from scholars and UN-types), but to pursue it successfully would take tagging your entire page, not just the first paragraph on this one. And I'm not yet ready for that. I first want to understand how far you want to go to attack folks that don't fit your definition of "exists," which I consider to be unfair and divisive and the sole basis for your other page where you attack innocent folks along with some pretendians-- not allowed by WP. List of Wikipedia controversies. Tsideh (talk) 07:10, 11 January 2024 (UTC)[reply]
"Can anybody truly argue that somebody who's moved to the US from, say, Yellow Knife or Otovalo cannot claim to be an American Indian because, er, they don't have a CDIB? These groups can claim to be tribes all they want but if reliable independent sources can not verify this then Wikipedia can not include it. --ARoseWolf21:05, 9 January 2024 (UTC)[reply]
But it's you making the argument that x, y, z tribes are self-identifying because the federal govt hasn't recognized them. Does anybody need proof that the Dene tribe in Denetah isn't recognized by the OFA-BIA? Who doubts this isn't the case. The same for most tribes in the world. Please re-consider your premise, else you're arguing that only US acknowledged tribes are real. Fewer than 4MM CDIBs, more than 40MM Indians in the world, and some of them, approx 4MM of them in the US, which is why the 2020 census says Indian population almost doubled since 2010. Indeed there are pretendians running around. It's a problem. But throwing out baby with bathwater ain't right either. Tsideh (talk) 22:10, 9 January 2024 (UTC)[reply]
In other words, the burden of proof is on you to prove that tribes that aren't "recognized" by the BIA are self-identifying, if this recognition is the basis of your claim. Where on Google can I go for that? What scholar argues that? Tsideh (talk) 22:14, 9 January 2024 (UTC)[reply]
Please don't take anything I write as any kind of a put down or snark. My feedback is offered in seriousness. And I look forward to your considered reply. It's a healthy conversation Indians should be having. I just hope it elevates past the freshman argument that the only tribes in the world are those acknowledged by the US federal government. This kind of talk went out in the 1970s. Perhaps you and Y should narrow your scope and argue that the only folks who should receive US services as American Indians should be those who have CDIBs. In that circumscribed context, you'd be right that organizations that aren't federally acknowledged are self-identifying. Tsideh (talk) 22:30, 9 January 2024 (UTC)[reply]
Every notable organization, that is located wherever in the world it is, that makes a claim to be Indigenous and can only be cited to that organization, meaning there is not an independent reliable source that verifies the claim, can only be self-identifying on Wikipedia. That isn't my rule, Yuchitown's rule, Netherzone's rule, it is Wikipedia policy. It doesn't matter what we personally think and we are making no argument for or against their claim. We are ensuring policy is followed and creating multiple accounts to attempt to force something is the wrong approach. --ARoseWolf12:25, 10 January 2024 (UTC)[reply]
Hopefully, this will all come to an end soon, but this article is exclusively about organizations within the United States. Yuchitown (talk) 22:25, 9 January 2024 (UTC)Yuchitown[reply]
That's not clear in your texts. Without that clafification, including one about Indians born in other countries and residing in the US, you're saying that famous folks like Rigoberta Menchu, Gary Farmer and Adam Beach aren't real Indians. Tsideh (talk) 22:45, 9 January 2024 (UTC)[reply]
"These organizations, located within the United States, self-identify as Native American tribes or heritage groups, but they are not federally recognized tribes or state-recognized tribes."} I don't know how much clearer that needs to be. We aren't focused on Canada in this article. And this list mentions no individuals but organizations. The statement is true. These organizations do not receive any recognition, in reliable sources, as to their legitimacy. Therefore Wikipedia saying they self-identify is correct. They make a claim that is not verified in reliable independent sources. We are giving them as much respect as we can within policy and also allowing that it can changed once reliable sources are found that they have such recognition. --ARoseWolf12:09, 10 January 2024 (UTC)[reply]
Do you understand that WP:RS is a Wikipedia policy not our reasoning? Unless there are reliable sources to state that organizations or individuals are, in fact, Indigenous, Native American, Indian or any other nationality or ethnicity then it will always remain a self-identification. If I became notable enough to warrant an article on Wikipedia and you were able to see me you might would tell I look like I have some features that appear American Indian and probably less so Jewish. Unless I have proof in reliable sources that I have direct links back to those groups of people then the only Wikipedia could say is I self-identify. That is policy. Just because I say it doesn't make it so. Once again, we rely on reliable independent secondary sources. --ARoseWolf12:23, 11 January 2024 (UTC)[reply]
"Perhaps I should give up and get off this talk and go straight to your pages and to post WP-proper references to these refugee Indians all over your pages and ask for WP Spanish and Portuguese translation so Indians from around the world (meatpuppets?) can join this conversion."I invite your meatpuppets to join. Are you threatening to canvass meatpuppets to ENWP to edit war content in that consensus and policy is saying doesn't belong? All human beings have a right to self-determination. That does not mean anyone is forced to accept their unproven claims of being Indigenous. --ARoseWolf12:33, 11 January 2024 (UTC)[reply]
@Tsideh, I get what you are trying to say, but your assumptions are wrong as to what this article "should" be. This article is about organizations that self-identifyasNative American tribes, not organizations that identify as First Nations, nor as MesoAmerican Indigenous, nor Indigenous peoples of Mexico, nor Native Hawaiians, nor the Indigenous peoples of Asia, nor Sami, nor Indigenous Caribbeans, nor Indigenous South Americans, nor any other global Indigenous peoples....it is in fact about organizations that self-identify as Native Americans, meaning it has a U.S. focus. Netherzone (talk) 16:32, 11 January 2024 (UTC)[reply]
We're talking about Native Americans or People who originated from the Americas, right? I get it that many United Statians simply call themselves American, and that many of these think the rest of the continent and hemisphere is called something else, like Nativia or Old Mexico.
Again, you're mis-informing the WP reader by talking as if your narrow definition of, in this case, Native American is the established thing, when it's not at all. Guess what, Indians call themselves Native in Canada too. In the Spanish and Portuguese part of America, they go with the word that means native in those languages, indígena, Please, please, please cite a credible source that supports your POV that Native Americans are found only in the US and/or govt recognition is fundamental to Indian identity. Also think of what you're saying: first there was the US, then there were Native Americans, and if you happen to come from outside those boundaries, say Denetah, you're not Native American. Of course, in some of these countries, like say Mexico, the govt owns the designation and confer it only on individuals whose primary tongue is their indigenous tongue or who live outside your traditional native village. By the definition many governments south of the US enforce, there are no real United Statian Natives, which is why govt recognition doesn't work in the way you're using it.
I recall sitting in the back seat of a car listening to Micmacs in the front seat arguing with the US border guards that the "Jay Treaty of 1802...says we don't have to declare any nationality but our own....and our nation crosses your border." Then there's the Tohono and Yaqui of Arizona....
Indeed, the nomenclature doesn't align with such an easy demarcation as the US border. You disengage from this border-bound identity whenever you invoke the term Native American. You missed the criticism of the Lipans you're attacking in your other pages that they identify as a Texas tribe, when written history (i.e. Spanish military journals) says the Lipan moved down to Texas from what's today Nebraska, and before that Alberta and Yukon. By your definition, they're not Native American in the first place because they come from a land beyond the northern US border.
I don't make these comments lightly. I do it to point out the fundamental flaw in your argument that Native American tribes cannot legitimately self-determine their status and that they exist solely at the discretion of the colonial government. You may think you're on to something new, but you're not. Your argument was discarded decades ago by Native American leaders who also had United Statian and/or Canadian citizenship. What became obvious to everybody who followed this debate beginning in the mid-1970s was that Indians make Indian tribes, not the current occupying government., Tsideh (talk) 23:42, 21 January 2024 (UTC)[reply]
Wrong, we are talking about heritage groups and groups claiming to be Native American tribes in the US who have, themselves, filed many times with state and federal authorities seeking US federal and state funding to support their ventures, whatever they may be. That's what this list is. Nothing more, nothing less. If the Lipan tribe of Texas want to file for First Nation recognition they can go through whatever process is required for that. But this list doesn't focus on that. It is very specific about the criteria for which the list was made. If they are a self-identifying Native American tribal nation located within the borders of the United States and there is not a clearly defined state or federal source of recognition by way of official documents then they belong on the list. if they are not located within the borders of the United States or hold federal recognition from another government then they are not on the list. The Mi'kmaq are not on this list. I leave you to figure out why. --ARoseWolf16:58, 22 January 2024 (UTC)[reply]
Wishful thinking, not a threat. And frustration that this conversation has been had at length by official representatives from hundreds of tribes starting in the 1970s and ending in the 2000s, which I've cited numerous times. Ironically one of points of that consensus was that self-identification is the premise on which tribal identity rests. That tribes who don't self-identify aren't real. in other words, self-identification is a virtue you're casting as a vice. Your page is at best incomplete if it doesn't reconcile the meaning it ascribes to the term self-identification with hundreds of Indigenous tribes' position, as stated in UNDRIP, that self-identification is a basic right of all Indigenous peoples.
To be sure, I share your concern that there are organizations/clubs/groups/entities/etc. who say they're tribes when they're neither a tribe nor even a group of Indians. I also know folks with CDIB's who're no more authentic than those groups. They got Indian status as descendants of non-Indians who got on the rolls during the chaos of the Dawes Act implementation, which is well documented. Fraudulent Indian identity is a real problem in our world. I should think that's part of the reality of being occupied.
It's not righteous, however, to delegate to the govt(s) that occupied our land the power to now determine who is/not Native. As an example of US govt being capricious and self-serving on this question, consider the US census bureau's current treatment American Indian identity as a race category. You know, if you're not White, Black, Asian or Hawaiian, then you must be Indian. That said, US govt recognition is tough, whether through the BIA or Congress. State recognition, which you seem to deem easier to attain, is tougher. I trust you're aware that some states, like Texas and California, pursued policies of extermination by violence, which they then burned into their constitutions and subsequent laws, some of which recite as fact that there are no longer any Indians on their territory. In those states, there's no real space for a tribe that survived that onslaught to ever dream of winning a govt-to-govt relationship with "their" state, which is what US govt acknowledgement means.
OK, WP requires independent documentation of recognition? If govt recognition is fundamentally biased and self-serving as a basis for such a claim, then that leaves only other tribes and tribal institutions. You say NCAI can't be it. Why? Does WP say the oldest Native American organization in the world is not a credible recognizer? Does/has NCAI let in fakes? I think these are fair and constructive questions the proponents of this page need to square. WP, please weigh in. Tsideh (talk) 05:41, 29 January 2024 (UTC)[reply]
On top of what @oncamera has stated about your OR it is good to point out Wikipedia is not a forum and not a place for advocacy. Unless you have specific edits to discuss directly related to what is written in the article and not your own analyses of the validity of Wikipedia policies, which is all I've seen from you across multiple articles now, then I think we are done here. --ARoseWolf14:53, 29 January 2024 (UTC)[reply]
There is not consensus for the changes that are proposed. Unfortunately, a fleet of sockpuppets and possible meatpuppets have flown in who are trying to push their POV here. Please discontinue canvassing and creating additional user accounts to try to make your arguments, several socks have already lost their editing privileges. If the disruption continues, Page Protection may need to be applied. Netherzone (talk) 00:01, 10 January 2024 (UTC)[reply]
There's not consensus for your hyper narrow definition of recognition as the basis for legitimacy in the context of Indigenous identity, tribal and individual. You're trying to force it without any demonstrated basis and in contradiction to much much more intensive efforts to reach an informed consensus, like the UNDRIP. I'll consider it if you share your sources. Tsideh (talk) 23:53, 21 January 2024 (UTC)[reply]
greetings Wikipedians, just here to support this page's development, and happy to offer suggestions/questions to improve the page, where and when suggestions can be productive for building consensus.
Great to see this subject getting the attention it deserves. Respectfully suggesting WP:INCITE, WP:NPOV for sentence, "Most of these organizations are not accepted as being Native American by established Native American tribes." This claim needs supportive evidence.
Wondering, since this is a U.S.-based context, as noted in above thread, would it be more productive to create consistency (re: definitional meaning of key terms of reference) by replacing "established Native American tribes" with "federally recognized tribes"? It seems the latter terminology would be more precise, re: the U.S.-based identity distinctions being addressed, wherein, the subject's main issue is reliant upon the U.S. government terminology to understand its parameters clearly; which the term "self-identify" is being compared to and shaped by. Changing the terminology would help to satisfy for neutrality and precision. At some future point in time, it could be very useful, as a sub-section, to offer readers opportunities to learn the historicized and contextualized issues that have led to self-identification as a significant socio-political strategies of many federally non-recognized Indigenous peoples of/ undergoing U.S./North American colonization.
Also, if "established Native American tribes" remains, how is this phrase is defined by scholarly subject-matter experts, the U.S. government, and from multitudes of stake holders on both sides of the issue?
There's only literature contrary to what's being argued on this page. I say the only consensus on the matter is UNDRIP. Yuchie, Wolfe, you got something better? Tsideh (talk) 23:55, 21 January 2024 (UTC)[reply]
Over the years, I've sat through endless discussions about Native/Indian/tribal identity and heard proponents contort themselves to arrive at a definition that works in all possible cases of Indian identity. Those of us who paid attention long enough to see all attempts to arrive at a unified definition fail saw the wisdom of UNDRIP, which says it's all a matter of self-determination and all tribes are entitled to identify in their own way on the basis of their own unique history, which they know best. It's the same everywhere in the Americas. There's always the Natives and the colonists from other continents. So it's not that some tribes have a govt-to-govt relationship with the federal or state govt while others can only self-identify cuz they don't such govt relationships. It's that all tribes self-identify, and some, not all, achieve a relationship with the feds, states, etc.
My 2 cents for a consensus is turn this page into an explanation of the many points of view on the question of tribal identity and legitimacy. Federal recognition is one narrow POV, not the "God particle." There are others. The last consensus was reached after more than two decades of discussion among many Native American tribes. In the US, some say.... Tsideh (talk) 02:42, 22 January 2024 (UTC)[reply]
The topic of this article is List of organizations that self-identify as Native American tribes. Go take your original research elsewhere, it doesn't belong on Wikipedia. oncamera (talk page)03:48, 22 January 2024 (UTC)[reply]