Roots of Our Renewal: Ethnobotany and Cherokee Environmental Governance
Published:
2015
Online ISBN:
9781452950709
Print ISBN:
9780816690893
Contents
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Resource Restrictions and the Production of Oklahoma’s “Green Country” Resource Restrictions and the Production of Oklahoma’s “Green Country”
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Cherokee Political Resurgence and Grassroots Activism Cherokee Political Resurgence and Grassroots Activism
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Environmental Self-Governance and the Reclamation of Resource Control Environmental Self-Governance and the Reclamation of Resource Control
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Resources, Relationships, and the Dynamics of Indigenous State Practice Resources, Relationships, and the Dynamics of Indigenous State Practice
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Conclusion Conclusion
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Chapter
3 The “Greening” of Oklahoma: State Power and Cherokee Resurgence after the Dust Bowl
Get access
Pages
83–114
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Published:May 2015
Cite
Carroll, Clint, 'The “Greening” of Oklahoma: State Power and Cherokee Resurgence after the Dust Bowl', Roots of Our Renewal: Ethnobotany and Cherokee Environmental Governance (Minneapolis, MN , 2015; online edn, Minnesota Scholarship Online, 21 Jan. 2016), https://doi.org/10.5749/minnesota/9780816690893.003.0004, accessed 19 Apr. 2024.
Abstract
In chapter 3, “The ‘Greening’ of Oklahoma,” I discuss how more recent politics have shaped the Cherokee Nation environment, including fire suppression policies in the 1930s and the development of Oklahoma state tourism. I look in depth at the legacy of the federal allotment policy in relation to the ability of Cherokees to access resources. In this context, I also describe the resurgence of the Cherokee Nation as a political entity and its subsequent development of sophisticated environmental departments.
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