Native American Relations

Overview

Native Americans are the original inhabitants of North America, home to hundreds of distinct nations with their own languages, governments, and cultures long before contact with Europeans. As of the 2020 Census, 9.7 million Americans identify as Native American or Alaska Native, and there are 575 federally recognized tribes.

Tribes occupy a unique legal status in the US: They're recognized as sovereign nations with the right to self-governance, yet subject to federal authority. This relationship—established over two centuries through treaties, legislation, and Supreme Court decisions—gives tribal governments the power to make laws and operate courts, while managing their own affairs within reservation boundaries.

This legal framework emerged from a long, often violent history of displacement and broken treaties that dramatically reduced Native populations and land. Throughout the 20th century, tribes regained legal ground through legislation and court rulings affirming tribal sovereignty. Today, Native nations manage their own schools, healthcare systems, law enforcement, and economies—including a nearly $44B tribal gaming industry.

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