Disenrollment and Immigration: How Sovereign are Indigenous Nations?

25ey_1678_x_281.png
donation_events_839_x_281_0.png catalog_web_banner.png

 

Produced by: 
KBOO
Air date: 
Wed, 08/15/2018 - 8:00am to 9:00am
More Images: 

 

Jacqueline Keeler welcomes Alfred Urbina, the attorney general for the Pascua Yaqui Tribe of Arizona. The Pascua Yaqui are the first federally recognized tribe with a high-tech enhanced tribal card (ETC), a certified ID card for border transit. They were also on of the first tribes to use the expanded jurisdiction granted to tribes under the 2013 Violence Against Women’s Act. The tribe prosecuted several non-Native men for domestic violence.

http://america.aljazeera.com/articles/2014/4/23/for-one-arizona-tribeachanceforjusticeafterdecadesoflegallimbo.html

https://www.phoenixnewtimes.com/news/yaqui-tribe-expands-high-tech-ids-9477002

Jacqueline Keeler is a Diné/Ihanktonwan Dakota writer and contributor to The Nation, High Country News, Yes! Magazine and many other publications. Her book “The Edge of Morning: Native Voices Speak for the Bears Ears” is available from Torrey House Press and the forthcoming “Standing Rock to the Bundy Standoff: Occupation, Native Sovereignty, and the Fight for Sacred Landscapes” will be released next year.

Jacqueline Keeler's Not Your Disappearing Indian podcast is taking over Wednesday Talk Radio this Summer.  Find more episodes on iTunes and Soundcloud.

Download audio file

Audio by Topic: