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Bureau
of Indian Affairs
I.
Introduction
Indian Affairs, Bureau of, agency of the United States
government, generally responsible for administering
federal policy for Native Americans and Inuits.
It shares some responsibilities-for example, in
education and housing-with other federal agencies.
One of the oldest federal agencies, the Bureau of
Indian Affairs was created in 1824 by the War Department;
it was added to the new U.S. Department of the Interior
in 1849.
Its early mission was to assimilate Native Americans
into white American culture, but by the 1930s it
had succeeded only in drastically disrupting Native
American life.
Its present mandate from the U.S. Congress is to
provide technical assistance to tribal governments,
as well as to aid them in obtaining maximum benefits
from Native American resources.
II.
Administration
The
Bureau of Indian Affairs is headed by an assistant
secretary who is responsible for developing policies
and programs and for seeing to their administration.
The central headquarters is in Washington, D.C.,
but most of the bureau's employees and resources
are scattered among its 84 agency offices on Native
American reservations.
Each
agency is assigned to one of 12 bureau area offices,
which serve as intermediaries between the agency
offices and the central office in Washington, D.C.
The bureau currently employs about 14,500 people,
most of whom are Native Americans.
III.
Current Programs
Programs
of the Bureau of Indian Affairs fall into the general
categories of education, technical assistance, economic
development, and trust protection. It builds, maintains,
and staffs schools on large reservations where public
schools are inaccessible. It also sponsors vocational
training and employment programs for adults on reservations
and in urban areas.
To
tribal governments, the bureau offers technical
advice and service on administrative procedures,
construction, and economic development projects.
It maintains a loan fund to assist individual and
tribal businesses.
The bureau also oversees the preservation and use
of land and other valuable natural resources that
are held in trust for tribes by the federal government.
Public Law 93-638 (passed in 1975) offers new employment
opportunities to tribes by permitting them to take
over some bureau programs and services under federal
contracts.
Elected
tribal governments enjoy certain sovereign rights
in their relations with the federal government.
The challenge facing the Bureau of Indian Affairs
is to implement congressional policy mandates without
infringing on these rights.
***
Contributed
By: Robert L. Bee, M.A., Ph.D. Professor of Anthropology,
University of Connecticut. Author of The Politics
of American Indian Policy and Crosscurrents Along
the Colorado River: The Impact of Government Policy
on the Quechan Indians.
"Indian
Affairs, Bureau of," Microsoft® Encarta® Online
Encyclopedia 2000 http://encarta.msn.com
© 1997-2000 Microsoft Corporation. All rights reserved.
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