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The Bureau of Indian Affairs (BIA), also known as Indian Affairs (IA), is a United States federal agency within the Department of the Interior. It is responsible for implementing federal laws and policies related to Native Americans and Alaska Natives, and administering and managing over 55,700,000 acres (225,000 km2) of reservations held in trust by the U.S. federal government for indigenous tribes. It renders services to roughly 2 million indigenous Americans across 574 federally recognized tribes. The BIA is governed by a director and overseen by the Assistant Secretary for Indian Affairs, who answers to the secretary of the interior.
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Agency overview | |
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Formed | March 11, 1824 |
Preceding agency |
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Jurisdiction | Federal Government of the United States |
Headquarters | Main Interior Building 1849 C Street, NW Washington, DC 20240 |
Employees | 4,569 (FY2020) |
Annual budget | $2.159 billion (FY2021) |
Agency executives |
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Parent agency | United States Department of the Interior |
Child agencies |
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Website | bia.gov |
The BIA works with tribal governments to help administer law enforcement and justice; promote development in agriculture, infrastructure, and the economy; enhance tribal governance; manage natural resources; and generally advance the quality of life in tribal communities. Educational services are provided by Bureau of Indian Education—the only other agency under the assistant secretary for Indian affairs—while health care is the responsibility of the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services through its Indian Health Service.
The BIA is one of the oldest federal agencies in the U.S., with roots tracing back to the Committee on Indian Affairs established by Congress in 1775. First headed by Benjamin Franklin, the committee oversaw trade and treaty relations with various indigenous peoples, until the establishment of the Bureau of Indian Affairs by Secretary of War John C. Calhoun in 1824. The BIA gained statutory authority in 1832, and in 1849 was transferred to the newly created Department of the Interior. Until the formal adoption of its current name in 1947, the BIA was variably known as the Indian office, the Indian bureau, the Indian department, and the Indian Service.
The BIA's mission and mandate historically reflected the U.S. government's prevailing policy of forced assimilation of native peoples and the annexation of their land; beginning with the Indian Self-Determination and Education Assistance Act of 1975, the BIA has increasingly emphasized tribal self-determination and peer-to-peer relationships between tribal governments and federal government.
Between 1824 and 1977, the BIA was led by a total of 42 commissioners, of whom six were of indigenous descent. Since the creation of the position of Assistant Secretary for Indian Affairs in 1977, all thirteen occupants up to the present day have been Indigenous, including Bay Mills Indian Community's Bryan Newland, appointed and confirmed to the position in 2021. As of 2020,[update] the majority of BIA employees are American Indian or Alaska Native, the most at any time in the agency's history.
Organization
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Headquartered in the Main Interior Building in Washington, D.C., the BIA is headed by a bureau director who reports to the assistant secretary for Indian affairs. The current assistant secretary is Bryan Newland.
The BIA oversees 574 federally recognized tribes through four offices:
- Office of Indian Services: operates the BIA's general assistance, disaster relief, Indian child welfare, tribal government, Indian self-determination, and Indian Reservation Roads Program.
- Office of Justice Services (OJS): directly operates or funds law enforcement, tribal courts, and detention facilities on federal Indian lands. OJS funded 208 law enforcement agencies, consisting of 43 BIA-operated police agencies, and 165 tribally operated agencies under contract, or compact with the OJS. The office has seven areas of activity: Criminal Investigations and Police Services, Detention/Corrections, Inspection/Internal Affairs, Tribal Law Enforcement and Special Initiatives, the Indian Police Academy, Tribal Justice Support, and Program Management. The OJS also provides oversight and technical assistance to tribal law enforcement programs when and where requested. It operates four divisions: Corrections, Drug Enforcement, the , and Law Enforcement.
- Office of Trust Services: works with tribes and individual American Indians and Alaska Natives in the management of their trust lands, assets, and resources.
- The Office of Field Operations: oversees 12 regional offices; Alaska, Great Plains, Northwest, Southern Plains, Eastern, Navajo, Pacific, Southwest, Eastern Oklahoma, Midwest, Rocky Mountain, and Western; and 83 agencies, which carry out the mission of the bureau at the tribal level.
History
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Early US agencies and legislation: Intercourse Acts
Agencies related to Native Americans originated in 1775, when the Second Continental Congress created a trio of Indian-related agencies. Benjamin Franklin and Patrick Henry were appointed among the early commissioners to negotiate treaties with Native Americans to obtain their neutrality during the American Revolutionary War.
Office of Indian Trade (1806–1822)
In 1789, the U.S. Congress placed Native American relations within the newly formed War Department. By 1806 the Congress had created a Superintendent of Indian Trade, or "Office of Indian Trade" within the War Department, who was charged with maintaining the United States Government Fur Trade Factory System. The post was held by Thomas L. McKenney from 1816 until the abolition of the factory system in 1822.
The government licensed traders to have some control in Indian territories and gain a share of the lucrative trade.
Bureau of Indian Affairs (1824–present)
The abolition of the factory system left a vacuum within the U.S. government regarding Native American relations. The Bureau of Indian Affairs was formed on March 11, 1824, by Secretary of War John C. Calhoun, who created the agency as a division within his department, without authorization from the United States Congress. He appointed McKenney as the first head of the office, which went by several names. McKenney preferred to call it the "Indian Office", whereas the current name was preferred by Calhoun.
The Bureau was initially organized by region, with commissions for Superintendents of Indian Affairs granted to prominent citizens in each region of the southern, midwestern and western United States. These superindenents were authorized to negotiate with tribes and oversaw Indian agents in their assigned region. The bureau was eventually reorganized in 1878, with superintendencies removed. These were eventually replaced with regional offices, which continue today.
The Removal Era (1830–1850)
The BIA's goal to protect domestic and dependent nations, was reaffirmed by the 1831 court case Cherokee Nation v. Georgia. The Supreme Court originally refused to hear the case, because the Cherokee nation was not an independent state and could not litigate in the federal court. It was not until the court case Worcester v. Georgia, when Chief Justice John Marshall allowed Native American tribes to be recognized as "domestic dependent nations." These court cases set precedent for future treaties, as more Native tribes were recognized as domestic and dependent nations.
This period was encompassed by westward expansion and the removal of Native Nations. In 1833 Georgians fought for the removal of the Cherokee Nation from the state of Georgia. Despite the rulings of Worcester v. Georgia, President Jackson and John C. Calhoun created a plan for removal. The removal of the Cherokee Nation occurred in 1838 and was accompanied by the Treaty of 1846. When reparations from the treaty were unfulfilled, the Senate Committee on the Indian Affairs made the final settlement in 1850. This settlement, "supported the position of the Cherokee that the cost of maintaining the tribesman during their removal and the years upkeep after their arrival West should be paid by the federal government, and the expense of the removal agents should be paid as well."
In 1832 Congress established the position of Commissioner of Indian Affairs. In 1849 Indian Affairs was transferred to the newly established U.S. Department of the Interior. In 1869, Ely Samuel Parker was the first Native American to be appointed as commissioner of Indian affairs.
Assimilation (1890–1930)
One of the most controversial policies of the Bureau of Indian Affairs was the late 19th to early 20th century decision to educate native children in separate boarding schools, such as the Carlisle Indian Industrial School. The goal was to train students in the proper behavior according to prevailing standards of "civilization." That way they could assimilate into American society and not be permanently trapped in reservations. The boarding schools prohibited students from using their indigenous languages, practices, and cultures.
Another force for assimilation and Euro-American control was the Bureau of Indian Affairs tribal police force. This was designed by its agents to decrease the power of American Indian leaders.
Reform and reorganization (mid to late 20th century)
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The bureau was renamed from Office of Indian Affairs to Bureau of Indian Affairs in 1947.
With the rise of American Indian activism in the 1960s and 1970s and increasing demands for enforcement of treaty rights and sovereignty, the 1970s were a particularly turbulent period of BIA history. The rise of activist groups such as the American Indian Movement (AIM) worried the U.S. government; the FBI responded both overtly and covertly (by creating COINTELPRO and other programs) to suppress possible uprisings among native peoples.
As a branch of the U.S. government with personnel on Indian reservations, BIA police were involved in political actions such as:
The occupation of BIA headquarters in Washington, D.C., in 1972: On November 3, 1972, a group of around 500 American Indians with the AIM took over the BIA building, the culmination of their Trail of Broken Treaties walk. They intended to bring attention to American Indian issues, including their demands for renewed negotiation of treaties, enforcement of treaty rights and improvement in living standards. They occupied the Department of Interior headquarters from November 3 to 9, 1972.
- Feeling the government was ignoring them, the protesters vandalized the building. After a week, the protesters left, having caused $700,000 in damages. Many records were lost, destroyed or stolen, including irreplaceable treaties, deeds, and water rights records, which some Indian officials said could set the tribes back 50 to 100 years.[citation needed]
- The Wounded Knee Incident of 1973, where activists at the Pine Ridge Indian Reservation occupied land for more than two months.
- The 1975 Pine Ridge shootout (for which Leonard Peltier was convicted of killing two FBI agents).
The BIA was implicated in supporting controversial tribal presidents, notably Dick Wilson, who was charged with being authoritarian; using tribal funds for a private paramilitary force, the Guardians of the Oglala Nation (or "GOON squad"), which he employed against opponents; intimidation of voters in the 1974 election; misappropriation of funds, and other misdeeds. Many native peoples continue to oppose policies of the BIA. In particular, problems in enforcing treaties, handling records and trust land incomes were disputed.
21st century
In 2002 Congress worked with the Bureau to prepare bill S.1392, which established procedures for tribal recognition. A separate bill S. 1393 ensured full and fair participation in decision-making processes at the Bureau via grants. Both bills addressed what services, limitations, obligations, and responsibilities a federally recognized tribe possessed. The bills excluded any splinter groups, political factions, and any groups formed after December 31, 2002.
In 2013 the Bureau was greatly affected by sequestration funding cuts of $800 million, which particularly affected the already-underfunded Indian Health Service.
Legal issues
Employee overtime
The Bureau of Indian Affairs has been sued four times in class action overtime lawsuits brought by the , a union which represents the federal civilian employees of the Bureau of Indian Affairs, the Bureau of Indian Education, the assistant secretary of Indian affairs and the Office of the Special Trustee for Indian Affairs. The grievances allege widespread violations of the Fair Labor Standards Act and claim tens of millions of dollars in damages.
Trust assets
Cobell vs. Salazar, a major class action case related to trust lands, was settled in December 2009. The suit was filed against the U.S. Department of Interior, of which the BIA is a part. A major responsibility has been the management of the Indian trust accounts. This was a class-action lawsuit regarding the federal government's management and accounting of more than 300,000 individual American Indian and Alaska Native trust accounts. A settlement fund totaling $3.4 billion is to be distributed to class members. This is to compensate for claims that prior U.S. officials had mismanaged the administration of Indian trust assets. In addition, the settlement establishes a $2 billion fund enabling federally recognized tribes to voluntarily buy back and consolidate fractionated land interests.
Mission
The bureau is currently trying to evolve from a supervisory to an advisory role. However, this has been a difficult task as the BIA is known by many Indians as playing a police role in which the U.S. government historically dictated to tribes and their members what they could and could not do in accordance with treaties signed by both.
Commissioners and assistant secretaries
Commissioners and assistant secretaries of Indian Affairs include:
Heads of the Bureau of Indian Affairs
- 1824–1830 Thomas L. McKenney
- 1830–1831
- 2002–2004
- 2004–2005
- 2005–2007
- 2007–2010
- 2010–2016
- 2016–2017
- 2017–2018
- 2018–2024
- 2024–Present
Commissioners of Indian Affairs
- 1832–1836
- 1836–1838
- 1838–1845 Thomas Hartley Crawford
- 1845–1849 William Medill
- 1849–1850 Orlando Brown
- 1850–1853
- 1853–1857 George Washington Manypenny
- 1857–1858 James W. Denver
- 1858 Charles E. Mix
- 1858–1859 James W. Denver
- 1859–1861 Alfred B. Greenwood
- 1861–1865 William P. Dole
- 1865–1866
- 1866–1867 Lewis V. Bogy
- 1867–1869 Nathaniel Green Taylor
- 1869–1871 Ely S. Parker, first Native American to hold the position
- 1871–1872 Francis A. Walker
- 1873–1875 Edward Parmelee Smith
- 1875–1877 John Q. Smith
- 1877–1880
- 1880–1881 Rowland E. Trowbridge
- 1881–1885 Hiram Price
- 1885–1888 John DeWitt Clinton Atkins
- 1888–1889
- 1889–1893 Thomas Jefferson Morgan
- 1893–1897
- 1897–1904 William Arthur Jones
- 1905–1909 Francis E. Leupp
- 1909–1913
- 1913–1921 Cato Sells
- 1921–1929 Charles H. Burke
- 1929–1933
- 1933–1945 John Collier
- 1945–1948
- 1948–1949 (acting)
- 1949–1950
- 1950–1953 Dillon S. Myer
- 1953–1961 Glenn L. Emmons
- 1961 John O. Crow (acting)
- 1961–1966 Philleo Nash
- 1966–1969
- 1969–1972
- 1973–1976 Morris Thompson
- 1976–1977 Benjamin Reifel
- 1979–1981
Assistant Secretaries of the Interior for Indian Affairs
- 1977–1980
- 1981–1984
- 1985–1989 Ross Swimmer
- 1989–1993
- 1993–1997 Ada E. Deer
- 1997–2001 Kevin Gover
- 2001 (acting)
- 2001–2003 Neal A. McCaleb
- 2003–2004 (acting)
- 2004–2005 Dave Anderson
- 2005–2007 (acting)
- 2007–2008 Carl J. Artman
- 2008–2009 (acting)
- 2009–2012 Larry Echo Hawk
- 2012 Donald "Del" Laverdure (acting)
- 2012–2015 Kevin K. Washburn
- 2016–2017 (acting)
- 2017 (acting)
- 2017–2018 (acting)
- 2018–2021 Tara Sweeney
- 2021–2025 Bryan Newland
- 2025–present (acting)
Assistant to the Secretary for Indian Affairs
- February 7, 1973 – December 4, 1973
See also
- Title 25 of the Code of Federal Regulations
- Aboriginal Affairs and Northern Development Canada
- Administration for Native Americans
- American Indian Movement
- British Indian Department, during American Revolution
- Bureau of Indian Affairs Police
- Confederate States Bureau of Indian Affairs
- Commission of Indian Affairs, state equivalents of the federal Bureau
- Indian agent
- Indian Claims Commission
- Indian reservations
- National Indian Gaming Commission
- Outline of United States federal Indian law and policy
References
- Tana Fitzpatrick (February 4, 2021). The Bureau of Indian Affairs: FY2021 Appropriations (Report). Congressional Research Service. p. 1. Retrieved July 19, 2021.
- "About Us | Indian Affairs". bia.gov. Retrieved December 12, 2020.
- "Federal Register, Volume 83, Number 141 dated July 23, 2018" (PDF). Library of Congress. RetrievedOctober 5, 2018.
- "Bureau of Indian Affairs (BIA) | Indian Affairs". bia.gov. Retrieved December 12, 2020.
- "Education | Indian Affairs". bia.gov. Retrieved December 4, 2020.
- "Indian Health Service | Indian Health Service (IHS)". Indian Health Service. Retrieved December 4, 2020.
- Article I, Section 8, U.S. Constitution.
- "Home". Bureau of Indian Affairs. Retrieved June 23, 2022.
1849 C Street NW Washington, DC 20240
– Identified as the Main Interior Building here: "The meeting will be held at 1849 C Street, NW, Main Interior Building,[...]" - Hegyi, Nate (December 23, 2022). "Congress tasks a federal watchdog to examine Indian Affairs' troubled tribal jails". NPR News. Retrieved December 24, 2022.
- "Who We Are", BIA
- Henson, C.L. "From War to Self-Determination: a history of the Bureau of Indian Affairs". American Resources on the Net. Retrieved May 6, 2016.
- Waldman, Carl; Braun, Molly (2009). Atlas of the North American Indian. Infobase Publishing. p. 236. ISBN 978-0-8160-6858-6.
in 1806, an Office of Indian Trade was created within the War Department
- Jackson, Curtis (1997). A History of the Bureau of Indian affairs and Its Activities Among Indians. San Francisco, California: R & E Research. p. 43.
- chrome-extension://efaidnbmnnnibpcajpcglclefindmkaj/https://www.archives.gov/files/research/native-americans/bia/m1166.pdf
- https://historyhub.history.gov/native-american-records/b/native-american-records-blog/posts/office-of-indian-affairs-superintendency-records-1819-1878
- Harmon, George Dewey (1941). Sixty Years of Indian Affairs. New York: The University of North Carolina Press. pp. 174–196.
- Jackson, Curtis (1977). A History of The Bureau of Indian Affairs And Its Activities Among Indians. San Francisco, California: R & E Research Associates. p. 59.
- David Wallace Adams, Education for Extinction: American Indians and the Boarding School Experience, 1875–1928 (1995) pp 12-16; see online evaluation of the book.
- Lyden, Fremont (1992). Native Americans and Public Policy. Pittsburgh: University of Pittsburgh Press. pp. 23–41.
- Philip Worchel, Philip G. Hester and Philip S. Kopala, "Collective Protest and Legitimacy of Authority: Theory and Research," The Journal of Conflict Resolution, 18 (1) 1974): 37–54
- The COINTELPRO PAPERS – Chapter 7: COINTELPRO – AIM Archived July 23, 2008, at the Wayback Machine
- Paul Smith and Robert Warrior, Like a Hurricane: The Indian Movement from Alcatraz to Wounded Knee, New York: The New Press, 1996.
- "Stop bandwidth theft!". Maquah.net. Archived from the original on June 14, 2011. Retrieved June 8, 2012.
- "Stop bandwidth theft!". Maquah.net. Archived from the original on June 14, 2011. Retrieved June 8, 2012.
- "American Indian Rights Activist Vernon Bellecourt", Washington Post, October 14, 2007
- John Sanchez, et al. "Rhetorical Exclusion: The Government's Case Against American Indian Activists, AIM, and Leonard Peltier." American Indian Culture and Research Journal, 23(2) (1999): 31+.
- Congress, United States (2003). Tribal Recognition : Hearing before the Committee on Indian Affairs, United States Senate, One Hundred Seventh Congress, Second Session, on S. 1392, to Establish Procedures for the Bureau of Indian Affairs of the Department of the Interior with Respect to Tribal Recognition and S. 1393, to Provide Grants to Ensure Full and Fair Participation in Certain Decision making Processes at the Bureau of Indian Affairs. Washington D.C.: Washington D.C. United States Government Printing Office. pp. 1–3.
- Gale Courey Toensing (March 27, 2013). "Sequestration Grounds Assistant Secretary for Indian Affairs". Indian Country Today. Archived from the original on April 20, 2013. Retrieved March 28, 2013.
- Editorial Board (March 20, 2013). "The Sequester Hits the Reservation" (Editorial). The New York Times. Retrieved March 28, 2013.
- "FEDERATION OF INDIAN SERVICE EMPLOYEES - AFT - AFL/CIO, Local 4524 - Home". Ief.aft.org. Archived from the original on August 19, 2009. Retrieved June 8, 2012.
- "Cobell vs. Salazar Lawsuit". doi.gov/tribes/special-trustee.cfm. Office of Special Trustee, n.d. Web. April 24, 2011
- "From War to Self-Determination: the Bureau of Indian Affairs". Americansc.org.uk. May 25, 2011. Retrieved June 8, 2012.
- "U.S. government departments and offices, etc". Rulers.org. Retrieved June 8, 2012.
- Secretary, Office of the. "Martin Confirms Terry Virden As BIA Deputy Commissioner". doi.gov.
- "Anderson Names Brian Pogue as New BIA Director". doi.gov.
- "Assistant Secretary Announces W. Patrick Ragsdale". doi.gov.
- "News report" (PDF). cherokeeobserver.org. April 2008. Archived from the original on October 1, 2008.
- "News release" (PDF). bia.gov.[permanent dead link ]
- "Interior Picks Two for Key BIA, BIE Leadership Jobs – Indian Country Media Network". indiancountrymedianetwork.com.
- "Secretary Zinke Names Bryan Rice Director of Bureau of Indian Affairs". doi.gov. October 16, 2017.
- "Director of Bureau of Indian Affairs Darryl LaCounte | Indian Affairs". bia.gov. Retrieved June 30, 2021.
- "Director of Bureau of Indian Affairs Darryl LaCounte | Indian Affairs". bia.gov. Retrieved June 30, 2021.
- "John O. Crow Named Acting Commissioner of Indian Affairs and Member of Advisory Board on Indian Affairs" (PDF). Bureau of Indian Affairs. February 10, 1961. Archived from the original (PDF) on June 10, 2014. Retrieved July 30, 2015.
- "Nash Nominated as Commissioner of Indian Affairs; Crow Appointed Deputy Commissioner" (PDF). Bureau of Indian Affairs. August 1, 1961. Archived from the original (PDF) on March 4, 2016. Retrieved July 30, 2015.
- "Former commissioner of Indian Affairs dead at 89". New York Times. New York Times. Retrieved October 25, 2024.
- https://www.bia.gov/bia/history
- "News release" (PDF). indianaffairs.gov. Archived from the original (PDF) on February 2, 2018. Retrieved May 1, 2018.
- "Archived copy". Archived from the original on May 13, 2017. Retrieved May 11, 2017.
{{cite web}}
: CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link) - "Kiowa citizen John Tahsuda set to join Bureau of Indian Affairs leadership team".
- "Principal Deputy Assistant Secretary - Indian Affairs Bryan Newland | Indian Affairs". bia.gov. Retrieved June 30, 2021.
- "DeJong, David H. "Marvin L. Franklin: Assistant to the Secretary for Indian Affairs (February 7, 1973–December 4, 1973)." In Paternalism to Partnership: The Administration of Indian Affairs, 1786–2021, 335–38. University of Nebraska Press, 2021". jstor.org. JSTOR j.ctv2cw0sp9.54.
Further reading
- Belko, William S. "'John C. Calhoun and the Creation of the Bureau of Indian Affairs: An Essay on Political Rivalry, Ideology, and Policymaking in the Early Republic," South Carolina Historical Magazine 2004 105(3): 170–97. ISSN 0038-3082
- Brophy, William A., and Aberle, Sophie D. The Indian: America's Unfinished Business. Report of the Commission on the Rights, Liberties, and Responsibilities of the American Indian (University of Oklahoma Press, 1966).
- Cahill, Cathleen D. Federal Fathers and Mothers: A Social History of the United States Indian Service, 1869–1933 (U of North Carolina Press, 2011) 368 pp. online review
- Champagne, Duane. "Organizational change and conflict: A case study of the Bureau of Indian Affairs." American Indian Culture and Research Journal 7.3 (1983). online
- Danziger Jr, Edmund J. "The Indian Office During The Civil War: Impotence in Indian Affairs." South Dakota History 5 (1974): 52–72. online
- Deloria, Jr., Vine, and David E. Wilkins, Tribes, Treaties, & Constitutional Tribulations (Austin, 1999)
- Fixico, Donald L. Bureau of Indian Affairs (ABC-CLIO, 2012)
- Jackson, Curtis E. and Marcia J. Galli. A history of the Bureau of Indian Affairs and its activities among Indians (1977) online
- Jackson, Helen H. A Century of Dishonor: A Sketch of the U. S. Government's Dealings with Some of the Indian Tribes (1881) online edition highly critical and widely read in 1880s
- Lambert, Valerie. "The big black box of Indian country: The Bureau of Indian Affairs and the federal-Indian relationship." American Indian Quarterly 40.4 (2016): 333–363. online
- Lambert, Valerie. "Rethinking American Indian and Non-Indian Relations in the United States and Exploring Tribal Sovereignty: Perspectives from Indian Country and from Inside the Bureau of Indian Affairs." PoLAR: Political and Legal Anthropology Review 40.2 (2017): 278–294. online
- Leupp, F. E. The Indian and His Problem (1910) online edition
- McCarthy, Robert. "The Bureau of Indian Affairs and the federal trust obligation to American Indians." Brigham Young University Journal of Public Law 19 (2004): 1–160+. online, comprehensive overview
- Meriam, Lewis, et al., The Problem of Indian Administration, Studies in Administration, (Johns Hopkins, 1928), 898 pp; a major scholarly overview; [1]
- Nankano, Yumiko. "The Campaign for Civilization or Removal: Thomas L. McKenney and Federal Indian Affairs in the Formative Years" Bulletin of the Faculty of Humanities, Seikei University No.48 (2013) 85+ online
- Officer, James E. "The Bureau of Indian affairs since 1945: an assessment." The Annals of the American Academy of Political and Social Science 436.1 (1978): 61–72.
- Osburn, Katherine M. B. " 'To build up the morals of the tribe': Southern Ute women's sexual behavior and the Office of Indian Affairs, 1895-1932." Journal of Women's history 9.3 (1997): 10–27. excerpt
- Pevar, Stephen L. The Rights of Indians and Tribes (Southern Illinois UP, 2002)
- Porter, Frank W. The Bureau of Indian Affairs (1988), for secondary schools online
- Prucha, Francis P. Atlas of American Indian Affairs (U of Nebraska Press, 1990)
- Prucha, Francis P. The Great Father: The United States Government and the American Indians (Abridged Edition 1986) online
- Rockwell, Stephen J. Indian Affairs and the Administrative State in the Nineteenth Century (2010) online
- Schmeckebier, L. F. Office of Indian Affairs: History, Activities, and Organization, Service Monograph 48 (Johns Hopkins, 1927) online
- STUART, PAUL HENRY. "THE U.S. OFFICE OF INDIAN AFFAIRS, 1865-1900: THE INSTITUTIONALIZATION OF A FORMAL ORGANIZATION" (PhD dissertation, The University of Wisconsin - Madison; ProQuest Dissertations Publishing, 1978. 7814288).
- Sutton, I. "Indian Country and the Law: Land Tenure, Tribal Sovereignty, and the States," ch. 36 in Law in the Western United States, ed. G. M. Bakken (U Oklahoma Press, 2000)
- Taylor, Theodore W. The Bureau of Indian Affairs (Routledge, 2019) online
- Taylor, Theodore W. American Indian policy (1983) online
- Treglia, Gabriella. "Cultural Pluralism or Cultural Imposition? Examining the Bureau of Indian Affairs' Education Reforms during the Indian New Deal (1933–1945)." Journal of the Southwest 61.4 (2019): 821–862. excerpt
Primary sources
- Francis P. Prucha, ed. Documents of United States Indian Policy (3rd ed. 2000) online
External links
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- Official website
- "Records of the Bureau of Indian Affairs [BIA]". National Archives. August 15, 2016.
- Bureau of Indian Affairs in the Federal Register
- Background information about the Cobell Litigation
- Broken Promises: Evaluating the Native American Health Care System by the U.S. Commission on Civil Rights, September 2004
The Bureau of Indian Affairs BIA also known as Indian Affairs IA is a United States federal agency within the Department of the Interior It is responsible for implementing federal laws and policies related to Native Americans and Alaska Natives and administering and managing over 55 700 000 acres 225 000 km2 of reservations held in trust by the U S federal government for indigenous tribes It renders services to roughly 2 million indigenous Americans across 574 federally recognized tribes The BIA is governed by a director and overseen by the Assistant Secretary for Indian Affairs who answers to the secretary of the interior Bureau of Indian AffairsSealFlagAgency overviewFormedMarch 11 1824 200 years ago 1824 03 11 Preceding agencyOffice of Indian Affairs United States Department of WarJurisdictionFederal Government of the United StatesHeadquartersMain Interior Building 1849 C Street NW Washington DC 20240Employees4 569 FY2020 Annual budget 2 159 billion FY2021 Agency executives Acting Assistant Secretary for Indian AffairsStephanie Conduff Acting Director Bureau of Indian AffairsTony Dearman Director Bureau of Indian EducationJerry Gidner Director Bureau of Trust Funds AdministrationParent agencyUnited States Department of the InteriorChild agenciesBureau of Trust Funds Administration Bureau of Indian EducationWebsitebia gov The BIA works with tribal governments to help administer law enforcement and justice promote development in agriculture infrastructure and the economy enhance tribal governance manage natural resources and generally advance the quality of life in tribal communities Educational services are provided by Bureau of Indian Education the only other agency under the assistant secretary for Indian affairs while health care is the responsibility of the U S Department of Health and Human Services through its Indian Health Service The BIA is one of the oldest federal agencies in the U S with roots tracing back to the Committee on Indian Affairs established by Congress in 1775 First headed by Benjamin Franklin the committee oversaw trade and treaty relations with various indigenous peoples until the establishment of the Bureau of Indian Affairs by Secretary of War John C Calhoun in 1824 The BIA gained statutory authority in 1832 and in 1849 was transferred to the newly created Department of the Interior Until the formal adoption of its current name in 1947 the BIA was variably known as the Indian office the Indian bureau the Indian department and the Indian Service The BIA s mission and mandate historically reflected the U S government s prevailing policy of forced assimilation of native peoples and the annexation of their land beginning with the Indian Self Determination and Education Assistance Act of 1975 the BIA has increasingly emphasized tribal self determination and peer to peer relationships between tribal governments and federal government Between 1824 and 1977 the BIA was led by a total of 42 commissioners of whom six were of indigenous descent Since the creation of the position of Assistant Secretary for Indian Affairs in 1977 all thirteen occupants up to the present day have been Indigenous including Bay Mills Indian Community s Bryan Newland appointed and confirmed to the position in 2021 As of 2020 update the majority of BIA employees are American Indian or Alaska Native the most at any time in the agency s history OrganizationMain Interior Building the department headquarters Headquartered in the Main Interior Building in Washington D C the BIA is headed by a bureau director who reports to the assistant secretary for Indian affairs The current assistant secretary is Bryan Newland The BIA oversees 574 federally recognized tribes through four offices Office of Indian Services operates the BIA s general assistance disaster relief Indian child welfare tribal government Indian self determination and Indian Reservation Roads Program Office of Justice Services OJS directly operates or funds law enforcement tribal courts and detention facilities on federal Indian lands OJS funded 208 law enforcement agencies consisting of 43 BIA operated police agencies and 165 tribally operated agencies under contract or compact with the OJS The office has seven areas of activity Criminal Investigations and Police Services Detention Corrections Inspection Internal Affairs Tribal Law Enforcement and Special Initiatives the Indian Police Academy Tribal Justice Support and Program Management The OJS also provides oversight and technical assistance to tribal law enforcement programs when and where requested It operates four divisions Corrections Drug Enforcement the and Law Enforcement Office of Trust Services works with tribes and individual American Indians and Alaska Natives in the management of their trust lands assets and resources The Office of Field Operations oversees 12 regional offices Alaska Great Plains Northwest Southern Plains Eastern Navajo Pacific Southwest Eastern Oklahoma Midwest Rocky Mountain and Western and 83 agencies which carry out the mission of the bureau at the tribal level HistoryEly S Parker was the first Native American to be appointed as Commissioner of Indian affairs 1869 1871 Cato Sells Commissioner of Indian Affairs 1913Early US agencies and legislation Intercourse Acts Agencies related to Native Americans originated in 1775 when the Second Continental Congress created a trio of Indian related agencies Benjamin Franklin and Patrick Henry were appointed among the early commissioners to negotiate treaties with Native Americans to obtain their neutrality during the American Revolutionary War Office of Indian Trade 1806 1822 In 1789 the U S Congress placed Native American relations within the newly formed War Department By 1806 the Congress had created a Superintendent of Indian Trade or Office of Indian Trade within the War Department who was charged with maintaining the United States Government Fur Trade Factory System The post was held by Thomas L McKenney from 1816 until the abolition of the factory system in 1822 The government licensed traders to have some control in Indian territories and gain a share of the lucrative trade Bureau of Indian Affairs 1824 present The abolition of the factory system left a vacuum within the U S government regarding Native American relations The Bureau of Indian Affairs was formed on March 11 1824 by Secretary of War John C Calhoun who created the agency as a division within his department without authorization from the United States Congress He appointed McKenney as the first head of the office which went by several names McKenney preferred to call it the Indian Office whereas the current name was preferred by Calhoun The Bureau was initially organized by region with commissions for Superintendents of Indian Affairs granted to prominent citizens in each region of the southern midwestern and western United States These superindenents were authorized to negotiate with tribes and oversaw Indian agents in their assigned region The bureau was eventually reorganized in 1878 with superintendencies removed These were eventually replaced with regional offices which continue today The Removal Era 1830 1850 The BIA s goal to protect domestic and dependent nations was reaffirmed by the 1831 court case Cherokee Nation v Georgia The Supreme Court originally refused to hear the case because the Cherokee nation was not an independent state and could not litigate in the federal court It was not until the court case Worcester v Georgia when Chief Justice John Marshall allowed Native American tribes to be recognized as domestic dependent nations These court cases set precedent for future treaties as more Native tribes were recognized as domestic and dependent nations This period was encompassed by westward expansion and the removal of Native Nations In 1833 Georgians fought for the removal of the Cherokee Nation from the state of Georgia Despite the rulings of Worcester v Georgia President Jackson and John C Calhoun created a plan for removal The removal of the Cherokee Nation occurred in 1838 and was accompanied by the Treaty of 1846 When reparations from the treaty were unfulfilled the Senate Committee on the Indian Affairs made the final settlement in 1850 This settlement supported the position of the Cherokee that the cost of maintaining the tribesman during their removal and the years upkeep after their arrival West should be paid by the federal government and the expense of the removal agents should be paid as well In 1832 Congress established the position of Commissioner of Indian Affairs In 1849 Indian Affairs was transferred to the newly established U S Department of the Interior In 1869 Ely Samuel Parker was the first Native American to be appointed as commissioner of Indian affairs Assimilation 1890 1930 One of the most controversial policies of the Bureau of Indian Affairs was the late 19th to early 20th century decision to educate native children in separate boarding schools such as the Carlisle Indian Industrial School The goal was to train students in the proper behavior according to prevailing standards of civilization That way they could assimilate into American society and not be permanently trapped in reservations The boarding schools prohibited students from using their indigenous languages practices and cultures Another force for assimilation and Euro American control was the Bureau of Indian Affairs tribal police force This was designed by its agents to decrease the power of American Indian leaders Reform and reorganization mid to late 20th century 1940 Indians at Work magazine published by the Office of Indian Affairs predecessor agency to the Bureau of Indian Affairs The bureau was renamed from Office of Indian Affairs to Bureau of Indian Affairs in 1947 With the rise of American Indian activism in the 1960s and 1970s and increasing demands for enforcement of treaty rights and sovereignty the 1970s were a particularly turbulent period of BIA history The rise of activist groups such as the American Indian Movement AIM worried the U S government the FBI responded both overtly and covertly by creating COINTELPRO and other programs to suppress possible uprisings among native peoples As a branch of the U S government with personnel on Indian reservations BIA police were involved in political actions such as The occupation of BIA headquarters in Washington D C in 1972 On November 3 1972 a group of around 500 American Indians with the AIM took over the BIA building the culmination of their Trail of Broken Treaties walk They intended to bring attention to American Indian issues including their demands for renewed negotiation of treaties enforcement of treaty rights and improvement in living standards They occupied the Department of Interior headquarters from November 3 to 9 1972 Feeling the government was ignoring them the protesters vandalized the building After a week the protesters left having caused 700 000 in damages Many records were lost destroyed or stolen including irreplaceable treaties deeds and water rights records which some Indian officials said could set the tribes back 50 to 100 years citation needed The Wounded Knee Incident of 1973 where activists at the Pine Ridge Indian Reservation occupied land for more than two months The 1975 Pine Ridge shootout for which Leonard Peltier was convicted of killing two FBI agents The BIA was implicated in supporting controversial tribal presidents notably Dick Wilson who was charged with being authoritarian using tribal funds for a private paramilitary force the Guardians of the Oglala Nation or GOON squad which he employed against opponents intimidation of voters in the 1974 election misappropriation of funds and other misdeeds Many native peoples continue to oppose policies of the BIA In particular problems in enforcing treaties handling records and trust land incomes were disputed 21st century In 2002 Congress worked with the Bureau to prepare bill S 1392 which established procedures for tribal recognition A separate bill S 1393 ensured full and fair participation in decision making processes at the Bureau via grants Both bills addressed what services limitations obligations and responsibilities a federally recognized tribe possessed The bills excluded any splinter groups political factions and any groups formed after December 31 2002 In 2013 the Bureau was greatly affected by sequestration funding cuts of 800 million which particularly affected the already underfunded Indian Health Service Legal issuesEmployee overtime The Bureau of Indian Affairs has been sued four times in class action overtime lawsuits brought by the a union which represents the federal civilian employees of the Bureau of Indian Affairs the Bureau of Indian Education the assistant secretary of Indian affairs and the Office of the Special Trustee for Indian Affairs The grievances allege widespread violations of the Fair Labor Standards Act and claim tens of millions of dollars in damages Trust assets Cobell vs Salazar a major class action case related to trust lands was settled in December 2009 The suit was filed against the U S Department of Interior of which the BIA is a part A major responsibility has been the management of the Indian trust accounts This was a class action lawsuit regarding the federal government s management and accounting of more than 300 000 individual American Indian and Alaska Native trust accounts A settlement fund totaling 3 4 billion is to be distributed to class members This is to compensate for claims that prior U S officials had mismanaged the administration of Indian trust assets In addition the settlement establishes a 2 billion fund enabling federally recognized tribes to voluntarily buy back and consolidate fractionated land interests MissionThe bureau is currently trying to evolve from a supervisory to an advisory role However this has been a difficult task as the BIA is known by many Indians as playing a police role in which the U S government historically dictated to tribes and their members what they could and could not do in accordance with treaties signed by both Commissioners and assistant secretariesCommissioners and assistant secretaries of Indian Affairs include Heads of the Bureau of Indian Affairs 1824 1830 Thomas L McKenney 1830 1831 2002 2004 2004 2005 2005 2007 2007 2010 2010 2016 2016 2017 2017 2018 2018 2024 2024 PresentCommissioners of Indian Affairs 1832 1836 1836 1838 1838 1845 Thomas Hartley Crawford 1845 1849 William Medill 1849 1850 Orlando Brown 1850 1853 1853 1857 George Washington Manypenny 1857 1858 James W Denver 1858 Charles E Mix 1858 1859 James W Denver 1859 1861 Alfred B Greenwood 1861 1865 William P Dole 1865 1866 1866 1867 Lewis V Bogy 1867 1869 Nathaniel Green Taylor 1869 1871 Ely S Parker first Native American to hold the position 1871 1872 Francis A Walker 1873 1875 Edward Parmelee Smith 1875 1877 John Q Smith 1877 1880 1880 1881 Rowland E Trowbridge 1881 1885 Hiram Price 1885 1888 John DeWitt Clinton Atkins 1888 1889 1889 1893 Thomas Jefferson Morgan 1893 1897 1897 1904 William Arthur Jones 1905 1909 Francis E Leupp 1909 1913 1913 1921 Cato Sells 1921 1929 Charles H Burke 1929 1933 1933 1945 John Collier 1945 1948 1948 1949 acting 1949 1950 1950 1953 Dillon S Myer 1953 1961 Glenn L Emmons 1961 John O Crow acting 1961 1966 Philleo Nash 1966 1969 1969 1972 1973 1976 Morris Thompson 1976 1977 Benjamin Reifel 1979 1981 Assistant Secretaries of the Interior for Indian Affairs 1977 1980 1981 1984 1985 1989 Ross Swimmer 1989 1993 1993 1997 Ada E Deer 1997 2001 Kevin Gover 2001 acting 2001 2003 Neal A McCaleb 2003 2004 acting 2004 2005 Dave Anderson 2005 2007 acting 2007 2008 Carl J Artman 2008 2009 acting 2009 2012 Larry Echo Hawk 2012 Donald Del Laverdure acting 2012 2015 Kevin K Washburn 2016 2017 acting 2017 acting 2017 2018 acting 2018 2021 Tara Sweeney 2021 2025 Bryan Newland 2025 present acting Assistant to the Secretary for Indian Affairs February 7 1973 December 4 1973See alsoUnited States portalPolitics portalTitle 25 of the Code of Federal Regulations Aboriginal Affairs and Northern Development Canada Administration for Native Americans American Indian Movement British Indian Department during American Revolution Bureau of Indian Affairs Police Confederate States Bureau of Indian Affairs Commission of Indian Affairs state equivalents of the federal Bureau Indian agent Indian Claims Commission Indian reservations National Indian Gaming Commission Outline of United States federal Indian law and policyReferencesTana Fitzpatrick February 4 2021 The Bureau of Indian Affairs FY2021 Appropriations Report Congressional Research Service p 1 Retrieved July 19 2021 About Us Indian Affairs bia gov Retrieved December 12 2020 Federal Register Volume 83 Number 141 dated July 23 2018 PDF Library of Congress RetrievedOctober 5 2018 Bureau of Indian Affairs BIA Indian Affairs bia gov Retrieved December 12 2020 Education Indian Affairs bia gov Retrieved December 4 2020 Indian Health Service Indian Health Service IHS Indian Health Service Retrieved December 4 2020 Article I Section 8 U S Constitution Home Bureau of Indian Affairs Retrieved June 23 2022 1849 C Street NW Washington DC 20240 Identified as the Main Interior Building here The meeting will be held at 1849 C Street NW Main Interior Building Hegyi Nate December 23 2022 Congress tasks a federal watchdog to examine Indian Affairs troubled tribal jails NPR News Retrieved December 24 2022 Who We Are BIA Henson C L From War to Self Determination a history of the Bureau of Indian Affairs American Resources on the Net Retrieved May 6 2016 Waldman Carl Braun Molly 2009 Atlas of the North American Indian Infobase Publishing p 236 ISBN 978 0 8160 6858 6 in 1806 an Office of Indian Trade was created within the War Department Jackson Curtis 1997 A History of the Bureau of Indian affairs and Its Activities Among Indians San Francisco California R amp E Research p 43 chrome extension efaidnbmnnnibpcajpcglclefindmkaj https www archives gov files research native americans bia m1166 pdf https historyhub history gov native american records b native american records blog posts office of indian affairs superintendency records 1819 1878 Harmon George Dewey 1941 Sixty Years of Indian Affairs New York The University of North Carolina Press pp 174 196 Jackson Curtis 1977 A History of The Bureau of Indian Affairs And Its Activities Among Indians San Francisco California R amp E Research Associates p 59 David Wallace Adams Education for Extinction American Indians and the Boarding School Experience 1875 1928 1995 pp 12 16 see online evaluation of the book Lyden Fremont 1992 Native Americans and Public Policy Pittsburgh University of Pittsburgh Press pp 23 41 Philip Worchel Philip G Hester and Philip S Kopala Collective Protest and Legitimacy of Authority Theory and Research The Journal of Conflict Resolution 18 1 1974 37 54 The COINTELPRO PAPERS Chapter 7 COINTELPRO AIM Archived July 23 2008 at the Wayback Machine Paul Smith and Robert Warrior Like a Hurricane The Indian Movement from Alcatraz to Wounded Knee New York The New Press 1996 Stop bandwidth theft Maquah net Archived from the original on June 14 2011 Retrieved June 8 2012 Stop bandwidth theft Maquah net Archived from the original on June 14 2011 Retrieved June 8 2012 American Indian Rights Activist Vernon Bellecourt Washington Post October 14 2007 John Sanchez et al Rhetorical Exclusion The Government s Case Against American Indian Activists AIM and Leonard Peltier American Indian Culture and Research Journal 23 2 1999 31 Congress United States 2003 Tribal Recognition Hearing before the Committee on Indian Affairs United States Senate One Hundred Seventh Congress Second Session on S 1392 to Establish Procedures for the Bureau of Indian Affairs of the Department of the Interior with Respect to Tribal Recognition and S 1393 to Provide Grants to Ensure Full and Fair Participation in Certain Decision making Processes at the Bureau of Indian Affairs Washington D C Washington D C United States Government Printing Office pp 1 3 Gale Courey Toensing March 27 2013 Sequestration Grounds Assistant Secretary for Indian Affairs Indian Country Today Archived from the original on April 20 2013 Retrieved March 28 2013 Editorial Board March 20 2013 The Sequester Hits the Reservation Editorial The New York Times Retrieved March 28 2013 FEDERATION OF INDIAN SERVICE EMPLOYEES AFT AFL CIO Local 4524 Home Ief aft org Archived from the original on August 19 2009 Retrieved June 8 2012 Cobell vs Salazar Lawsuit doi gov tribes special trustee cfm Office of Special Trustee n d Web April 24 2011 From War to Self Determination the Bureau of Indian Affairs Americansc org uk May 25 2011 Retrieved June 8 2012 U S government departments and offices etc Rulers org Retrieved June 8 2012 Secretary Office of the Martin Confirms Terry Virden As BIA Deputy Commissioner doi gov Anderson Names Brian Pogue as New BIA Director doi gov Assistant Secretary Announces W Patrick Ragsdale doi gov News report PDF cherokeeobserver org April 2008 Archived from the original on October 1 2008 News release PDF bia gov permanent dead link Interior Picks Two for Key BIA BIE Leadership Jobs Indian Country Media Network indiancountrymedianetwork com Secretary Zinke Names Bryan Rice Director of Bureau of Indian Affairs doi gov October 16 2017 Director of Bureau of Indian Affairs Darryl LaCounte Indian Affairs bia gov Retrieved June 30 2021 Director of Bureau of Indian Affairs Darryl LaCounte Indian Affairs bia gov Retrieved June 30 2021 John O Crow Named Acting Commissioner of Indian Affairs and Member of Advisory Board on Indian Affairs PDF Bureau of Indian Affairs February 10 1961 Archived from the original PDF on June 10 2014 Retrieved July 30 2015 Nash Nominated as Commissioner of Indian Affairs Crow Appointed Deputy Commissioner PDF Bureau of Indian Affairs August 1 1961 Archived from the original PDF on March 4 2016 Retrieved July 30 2015 Former commissioner of Indian Affairs dead at 89 New York Times New York Times Retrieved October 25 2024 https www bia gov bia history News release PDF indianaffairs gov Archived from the original PDF on February 2 2018 Retrieved May 1 2018 Archived copy Archived from the original on May 13 2017 Retrieved May 11 2017 a href wiki Template Cite web title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint archived copy as title link Kiowa citizen John Tahsuda set to join Bureau of Indian Affairs leadership team Principal Deputy Assistant Secretary Indian Affairs Bryan Newland Indian Affairs bia gov Retrieved June 30 2021 DeJong David H Marvin L Franklin Assistant to the Secretary for Indian Affairs February 7 1973 December 4 1973 In Paternalism to Partnership The Administration of Indian Affairs 1786 2021 335 38 University of Nebraska Press 2021 jstor org JSTOR j ctv2cw0sp9 54 Further readingBelko William S John C Calhoun and the Creation of the Bureau of Indian Affairs An Essay on Political Rivalry Ideology and Policymaking in the Early Republic South Carolina Historical Magazine 2004 105 3 170 97 ISSN 0038 3082 Brophy William A and Aberle Sophie D The Indian America s Unfinished Business Report of the Commission on the Rights Liberties and Responsibilities of the American Indian University of Oklahoma Press 1966 Cahill Cathleen D Federal Fathers and Mothers A Social History of the United States Indian Service 1869 1933 U of North Carolina Press 2011 368 pp online review Champagne Duane Organizational change and conflict A case study of the Bureau of Indian Affairs American Indian Culture and Research Journal 7 3 1983 online Danziger Jr Edmund J The Indian Office During The Civil War Impotence in Indian Affairs South Dakota History 5 1974 52 72 online Deloria Jr Vine and David E Wilkins Tribes Treaties amp Constitutional Tribulations Austin 1999 Fixico Donald L Bureau of Indian Affairs ABC CLIO 2012 Jackson Curtis E and Marcia J Galli A history of the Bureau of Indian Affairs and its activities among Indians 1977 online Jackson Helen H A Century of Dishonor A Sketch of the U S Government s Dealings with Some of the Indian Tribes 1881 online edition highly critical and widely read in 1880s Lambert Valerie The big black box of Indian country The Bureau of Indian Affairs and the federal Indian relationship American Indian Quarterly 40 4 2016 333 363 online Lambert Valerie Rethinking American Indian and Non Indian Relations in the United States and Exploring Tribal Sovereignty Perspectives from Indian Country and from Inside the Bureau of Indian Affairs PoLAR Political and Legal Anthropology Review 40 2 2017 278 294 online Leupp F E The Indian and His Problem 1910 online edition McCarthy Robert The Bureau of Indian Affairs and the federal trust obligation to American Indians Brigham Young University Journal of Public Law 19 2004 1 160 online comprehensive overview Meriam Lewis et al The Problem of Indian Administration Studies in Administration Johns Hopkins 1928 898 pp a major scholarly overview 1 Nankano Yumiko The Campaign for Civilization or Removal Thomas L McKenney and Federal Indian Affairs in the Formative Years Bulletin of the Faculty of Humanities Seikei University No 48 2013 85 online Officer James E The Bureau of Indian affairs since 1945 an assessment The Annals of the American Academy of Political and Social Science 436 1 1978 61 72 Osburn Katherine M B To build up the morals of the tribe Southern Ute women s sexual behavior and the Office of Indian Affairs 1895 1932 Journal of Women s history 9 3 1997 10 27 excerpt Pevar Stephen L The Rights of Indians and Tribes Southern Illinois UP 2002 Porter Frank W The Bureau of Indian Affairs 1988 for secondary schools online Prucha Francis P Atlas of American Indian Affairs U of Nebraska Press 1990 Prucha Francis P The Great Father The United States Government and the American Indians Abridged Edition 1986 online Rockwell Stephen J Indian Affairs and the Administrative State in the Nineteenth Century 2010 online Schmeckebier L F Office of Indian Affairs History Activities and Organization Service Monograph 48 Johns Hopkins 1927 online STUART PAUL HENRY THE U S OFFICE OF INDIAN AFFAIRS 1865 1900 THE INSTITUTIONALIZATION OF A FORMAL ORGANIZATION PhD dissertation The University of Wisconsin Madison ProQuest Dissertations Publishing 1978 7814288 Sutton I Indian Country and the Law Land Tenure Tribal Sovereignty and the States ch 36 in Law in the Western United States ed G M Bakken U Oklahoma Press 2000 Taylor Theodore W The Bureau of Indian Affairs Routledge 2019 online Taylor Theodore W American Indian policy 1983 online Treglia Gabriella Cultural Pluralism or Cultural Imposition Examining the Bureau of Indian Affairs Education Reforms during the Indian New Deal 1933 1945 Journal of the Southwest 61 4 2019 821 862 excerptPrimary sources Francis P Prucha ed Documents of United States Indian Policy 3rd ed 2000 onlineExternal linksWikimedia Commons has media related to Bureau of Indian Affairs United States Official website Records of the Bureau of Indian Affairs BIA National Archives August 15 2016 Bureau of Indian Affairs in the Federal Register Background information about the Cobell Litigation Broken Promises Evaluating the Native American Health Care System by the U S Commission on Civil Rights September 2004