EssaysBank
Prewritten essays Custom written essays
Discount code:
Password:
Forgot your password?
  • 96% Satisfied & returning customers
  • Customer support 24/7
  • A wide range of services
  • Up to date sources
  • 100% privacy guaranteed
  • MA/PhD writers
  • Only custom-written papers
  • Free plagiarism report
  • Free amendments upon request
  • Free extras by your request
  • Direct communication with writer
Order now!
Essays: 184 988
 
03

Indian FRQ for AP US History

   
Essays, Papers: in current category
 
Title: Indian FRQ for AP US History
 
Essay Details
Subject: American History
Author:
Date: March 20, 1999
Level:
Grade:
Length: 3 / 727
No of views: 0
Essay rating: good 0, average 0, bad 0 (total score: 0)
 
Essay text:
 

The government was successfully able to turn the Plains Indians to agricultural based, thus, they begun assimilating the Plains Indians into their culture. Congress enforced the Dawes Severalty Act in 1887, which divided the Plains Indians reservations into small farms...
Showed first 250 characters

Pay for FULL access
Gives you access immediately to all 184 990 essays.


You get access to all the essays. You can view as many as you like.

As little as 14 cents/day!
Submit essays Takes from 3 to 7 days, before your essays get reviewed.

You must submit for review:
1 essay to get limited access
3 essays to get full access
Figure out how to submit essays.

Thus, they forced the agricultural upon the Plains Indians. Also, with the invasion of the white culture into the Plains Indians culture, the social lives of the Plains Indians were inevitably changed. One of the changes in their social lives was the weakening of tribal unity...
Showed next 250 characters

 
Common topics in this essay:
 
 
Comments:
 
 
Similar Essays:
 
Title Pages / Words Save
Indians
the Mi'kmaq ranged over most of the Maritimes and Quebec's Gaspe Peninsula, speaking the Algonquin tongue The aboriginal people of the Maritimes wintered on the Fundy side of the province, hunting deer and moose on expertly crafted snowshoes...
19 / 5049
indians
It is true that most people have romantic and Disneyland-ish ideas about what it means to be a modern Indian, the most of which are complete fantasy. The reality behind the situation seems to be the exact opposite...
2 / 339
indians
Thousand of years before the Europeans found North America; it was the Indians who settled the land. When the Europeans came they brought all sorts of germs, viruses and even diseases that were unknown to the Indians...
5 / 1396
indians
0 / 0
indians
The Native American is one group that has deal with migration, colonization on the creation side of the discussion. Also has suffered some form expulsion, segregation, assimilation and extermination on the consequence side of the discussion...
3 / 720
indians
Blue Jacket was a Shawnee chief and it is not really important whether he was adopted or native--any more than it makes a difference whether one of his wives was white, which Van Trees does not dispute...
4 / 933
Indians
? A second force contributing to the modern Aboriginal women's judiciary has been the increasing sensitivity shown by the Canadian judiciary ? Especially evident in the Northwest Territories in the 80s ? During this time customary law was considered in the sentencing of some Aboriginal offenders ? The Aboriginal women were concerned that Aboriginal offenders (many male) had been treated unequally by the Canadian justice system ? The result of this had often been injustice for Aboriginal women ? One specific case highlights these concerns: ? A one week sentence was handed down by a judge for three Inuit men accused of raping a thirteen year old girl ? The trial judge reasoned that cultural factors should be taken into consideration?noting that Inuit people do not regard having sex with a girl under fourteen as a crime ? In his statement he stated: "?when a girl begins to menstruate, she is considered ready to engage in sexual relations?[this] is the way life was and continues to be in the smaller communities" (Jackson 6) ? Later in the case the judge described the three accused as a credit to the community and to their country ? Although the judge attempted to incorporate Aboriginal standards for acceptable behaviour into his decision, his efforts to be sensitive to the local culture were rejected on appeal ? When viewed by the Court of Appeal they asserted that the courts are responsible for maintaining the law established by the Parliament of Canada and not for upholding community standards of behaviour ? The sentence was lengthened to four months ? This court decision implied that Aboriginal custom did not carry the same weight as Canadian Law and, by extension, that Aboriginal Peoples were not equal to non-Aboriginal peoples ? Aboriginal women are predominately concerned with these types of decisions ? They fear that the attendance to cultural context does not necessarily serve the interests of Aboriginal women and children ? In this regard, family violence and child abuse are frequently cited ? Aboriginal women argue that these kinds of crimes have no place in customary or in traditional law ? Another problem viewed by Aboriginal women is the holistic approach, either legally or politically, applied to the role of customary law in Canada ? Some argue that little or no customary law has been received into Canadian law, while others have suggested that it has been deformed when introduced into the non-Aboriginal court system ? Richstone points out that once a non-Aboriginal standard is adopted to determine the validity of Aboriginal customary law, the essence of the customary law may be lost ? For example: A judge may employ classifications of thought that are alien to the original structure of the Aboriginal ? Many Aboriginal people have expressed the concern that customary law can (and has) become distorted in the white man's courts ? Therefore, they feel it must be applied in its traditional form and setting ? They view this as one of the important goal of self-government
2 / 503
 
Privacy Policy   |   Terms Of Use