Indigenous citizens Native Americans' fight for sovereignty, 1776-2025

Paul C. Rosier

Book - 2026

A sweeping history of Native Americans' fraught relationship with United States citizenship and their efforts to protect tribal sovereignty.

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Subjects
Published
New York : W.W. Norton and Company [2026]
Language
English
Main Author
Paul C. Rosier (author)
Edition
First edition
Physical Description
x, 348 pages : illustrations ; 24 cm
Bibliography
Includes bibliographical references (pages [281]-330) and index
ISBN
9781324105879
  • Introduction
  • Part one: contesting assimilation, 1776-1924
  • "It was enough that they were Indians": racial conflict in the early republic, 1776-1829
  • "We cannot consent to be under your government": ethnic cleansing during the "Removal Period," 1830-1838
  • "The citizenship plan": Native people's fight for autonomy, 1838-1887
  • "Into the swim of American citizenship": forced allotment in Indian Country, 1887-1917
  • "The club of white man's wisdom": forced assimilation in Indian Boarding Schools, 1887-1917
  • "For the honor of the race and the good of the country": creating a dual citizenship, 1911-1928
  • Part two: demanding their rights, 1924-2025
  • "Citizen Indians, get busy": the fight for citizenship and sovereignty, 1924-1945
  • "No Indians and dogs allowed": Indigenous citizens' fight for civil rights, 1945-1951
  • "The great contradiction of dual citizenship": the resistance against termination, 1945-1961
  • "It is up to you to use your rights": Indigenous citizens' fight for Treaty Rights, 1961-1974
  • "Those dumb Indians ought to be shot": white backlash to Indigenous Sovereignty, 1974-2000
  • "Dual citizens of this country": Indigenous politics in the twenty-first century
Review by Kirkus Book Review

Documenting the political relationships between and among hundreds of Native nations and the U.S. and state governments. This ambitious history by Rosier, a Villanova University scholar, joins other recent sweeping surveys of Native history, including Pekka Hämäläinen'sIndigenous Continent (2022), Ned Blackhawk'sThe Rediscovery of America (2023), and Kathleen DuVal'sNative Nations (2025). Rosier focuses on Native political history, namely Native peoples' complicated relationship with citizenship within tribal nations, states, and the United States as a whole. From its origins, the U.S. has grappled with how Native people would fit into the nation, with varying "assimilation" programs deployed as early as 1778. Assimilation was more often than not a euphemism for coercive civilization programs rooted in Americans' white supremacy and insatiable desire for land. In response, Native people developed ingenious methods of "political syncretism and pragmatism," navigating generations of "broken promises, robbery, and violence." American citizenship was not something Native people "won" with the Indian Citizenship Act of 1924 as much as it was somethingimposed on them without their consent. In response, Native people crafted a conception of "dual citizenship," where they retained both Indigenous identity, land, and political sovereigntyand maintained active participation in the U.S. citizenry: casting votes, engaging in civil disobedience, and serving in the military. Rosier balances specific policy analysis with the larger story of Native peoples' navigation of persistent racial stigma, ignorance of Native history, and backlash against enforcement of treaty rights. Notably, conflict within Native nations--relating to removal, incorporating formerly enslaved people and their descendants into tribes, and the recognition of same-sex marriage--demonstrate that citizens of Native nations, like the U.S., are not monolithic. Native sovereignty is alive and well in this engaging introduction to the politics of Indigenous dual citizenship. Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.