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American Indian Population Recovery in the Twentieth Century

American Indian Population Recovery in the Twentieth Century

by Nancy Shoemaker
Paperback
Publication Date: 27/06/2000

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$28.60
Although the general public is not widely aware of this trend, American Indian population has grown phenomenally since 1900, their demographic nadir. No longer a vanishing race, Indians have rebounded to 1492 population estimates in nine decades. Until now, most research has focused on catastrophic population decline, but Nancy Shoemaker studies how and why American Indians have recovered. Her analysis of the social, cultural, and economic implications of the family and demographic patterns fuelling the recovery compares five different Indian groups: the Seneca Nation in New York State, Cherokees in Oklahoma, Red Lake Ojibways in Minnesota, Yakamas in Washington State, and Navajos in the Southwest. Marshalling individual-level census data, Shoemaker places American Indians in a broad social and cultural context and compares their demographic patterns to those of Euroamericans and African Americans in the United States.
ISBN:
9780826322890
9780826322890
Category:
Population & demography
Format:
Paperback
Publication Date:
27-06-2000
Language:
English
Publisher:
University of New Mexico Press
Country of origin:
United States
Pages:
155
Dimensions (mm):
230x150x10mm
Weight:
0.25kg

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