Chapter 2 investigates the taking of Native children, beginning in the closing decade of the Indian Wars, designed to quiet further revolt. Child taking continued through the emergence of movements for sovereignty and against tribal termination in the middle of the twentieth century. Again, states responded with an aggressive discourse about welfare and illegitimacy, resulting in removal of one in three Native kids from their homes. In response, from 1969 to 1978, tribal councils, the Association on American Indian Affairs, and Native newspapers, newsletters, and radio shows began a campaign for an Indian Child Welfare Act, calling the taking of children the latest episode in centuries of settler colonialism — and they won.
READ Excerp from Taking Children: A History of American Terror by Laura Briggs, published by the University of California Press. © 2020.
Source: Taking Children - Public Seminar
READ Excerp from Taking Children: A History of American Terror by Laura Briggs, published by the University of California Press. © 2020.
Source: Taking Children - Public Seminar
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