AIM (American Indian Movement) - the history.Paquette, Donna Rae
The American Indian Movement was a militant protest group born in 1968 during the 1960's Protest Era. Influenced by the Black Panthers, its goal was to secure treaty rights and improve the lives of the Native American population on reservations and in the cities, often through confrontational me...
HISTORY Vault: Native American History From Comanche warriors to Navajo code talkers, learn more about Indigenous history. WATCH NOW Sources American Indian Movement. AIMovement.org."Congress seeks to abolish tribes, relocate American Indians." Native Voices.Faces of AIM, 1968. Muscarelle Museum of...
(1968年成立的)美国印第安人运动(群众性组织)[略作AIM]
Learn the history of the Asian American Movement. Read about the Asian American movements of the 1960s and 1970s and the movement's goals,...
1 American Indian Movement (AIM) is an organization devoted to promoting cultural awareness and political self determination for Native Americans. AIM seeks recognition of treaty rights in accordance with agreements between Native American tribes and the United States government. The organization also supp...
The meaning of AMERICAN INDIAN is a member of any of the Indigenous peoples of the western hemisphere except often certain peoples (such as the Yupik and Inuit) who live in arctic regions; especially : an American Indian of North America and especially t
American Indian Movement 1 AmericanIndianMovement •Definition•BackgroundandAim •Demonstrations•Events•Split Definition•AIMisaNativeAmericanactivist organizationthatfocusesonspirituality,leadership,andsovereignty,formedtoaddressvariousissuesconcerningtheNativeAmericanurbancommunityinMinneapolis,includingpoverty,...
The American Indian Movement (AIM), inspired by the civil rights movement in the United States, organized in the summer of 1968 in Minnesota near the Minneapolis and St. Paul Native American neighborhoods. Its early founders and leaders were activists and still widely recognized names who are ...
In part 1, Rhea details how Euro-American women became associated with indigenous peoples—first during the early women's rights movement, then the postbellum period, when the abolitionist cause gave way to a push for Indian assimilation. This effort enabled figures such as Helen Hunt Jackson ...