Tribal Administration Handbook: A Guide for Native Nations in the United States (Makwa Enewed)
Description
A direct response to the needs and ambitions articulated by tribal administrators and leaders, this handbook seeks to serve practitioners, students, researchers, and community members alike. It grew out of an ongoing collaboration among scholars and practitioners from tribal nations, universities, tribal colleges, and nonprofit organizations who are developing practical and teaching resources in the field of tribal administration and governance. Designed as a readable, accessible volume, it focuses on three key areas: tribal management, funding and delivering core services, and sovereign tribes engaging settler governments. While the chapters complement one another by presenting a coherent and unified constellation of voices that illuminates a shared terrain of practical Indigenous governance, each chapter ultimately stands alone to accommodate a variety of needs and interests with specific best practices, quick-reference executive summaries, and practitioner notes to aid lesson applications. This humble collection of remarkable voices initiates a conversation about tribal administration that will hopefully continue to grow in service to Native nations.
Praise for Tribal Administration Handbook: A Guide for Native Nations in the United States (Makwa Enewed)
“The Tribal Administration Handbook brings together a veritable who’s who of leading tribal governance practitioners and experts to profoundly delve into the greatest Indian Country governance challenges of our time. It is a must-have desk reference for tribal leaders and administrators committed to forging prosperous futures for Tribal Nations.”
—IAN RECORD, former director, Partnership for Tribal Governance, National Congress of American Indians