In Defense of Sovereignty: Protecting the Oneida Nation's Inherent Right to Self-Determination
In Defense of Sovereignty: Protecting the Oneida Nation's Inherent Right to Self-Determination
by Rebecca M. Webster
University of Wisconsin Press, 2023 eISBN: 978-0-299-34068-1 | Paper: 978-0-299-34064-3 | Cloth: 978-0-299-34060-5 Library of Congress Classification E99.O45W423 2023 Dewey Decimal Classification 977.5004975543
ABOUT THIS BOOK | AUTHOR BIOGRAPHY | REVIEWS | TOC | REQUEST ACCESSIBLE FILE
ABOUT THIS BOOK
In Defense of Sovereignty recounts the history of the Oneida Nation and its struggles for self-determination. Since the nation’s removal from New York in the 1820s to what would become the state of Wisconsin, it has been engaged in legal conflicts with US actors to retain its sovereignty and its lands. Legal scholar and former Oneida Nation senior staff attorney Rebecca M. Webster traces this history, including the nation’s treaties with the US but focusing especially on its relationship with the village of Hobart, Wisconsin. Since 2003 there have been six disputes that have led to litigation between the local government and the nation. Central to these disputes are the local government’s attempts to regulate the nation and relegate its government to the position of a common landowner, subject to municipal authority.
As in so many conflicts between Indigenous nations and local municipalities, the media narrative about the Oneida Nation’s battle for sovereignty has been dominated by the local government’s standpoint. In Defense of Sovereignty offers another perspective, that of a nation citizen directly involved in the litigation, augmented by contributions from historians, attorneys, and a retired nation employee. It makes an important contribution to public debates about the inherent right of Indigenous nations to continue to exist and exercise self-governance within their territories without being challenged at every turn.
AUTHOR BIOGRAPHY
Rebecca M. Webster, an assistant professor in the American Indian studies department at the University of Minnesota Duluth, is a former senior staff attorney for the Oneida Nation. She is the coeditor of Tribal Administration and Governance Handbook, and her articles can be found in American Indian Quarterly, Planning Theory and Practice, Wisconsin Lawyer, Ethnohistory, and the Journal of American Indian Education.
REVIEWS
CHOICE Outstanding Academic Title
— CHOICE Outstanding Academic Title
TABLE OF CONTENTS
Contents
List of Illustrations
Foreword by Richard Monette
Preface
Introduction: This Will Be Our Legacy
Rebecca M. Webster
1 The Oneida Nation of Wisconsin and the Oneida Indian Reservation, 1821–1880
James W. Oberly
2 From Allotment to the Indian New Deal, 1887–1934
Frederick E. Hoxie
3 Evolution of a Nation
William Gollnick
4 Condemnation: Resisting Development on Nation-Owned Land
Rebecca M. Webster
5 Dispatching the Police: Brown County and Oneida Nation Intergovernmental Agreement
Rebecca M. Webster
6 Overcoming Restrictive Covenants to Reacquire Reservation Land
Rebecca M. Webster
7 Stormwater Taxes: “Anyway There Are No Tribal Debts to Hobart”
Rebecca M. Webster
8 The Big Apple Fest Case: The Village of Hobart’s Failed Attempt to Put an End to the Oneida Reservation and Obtain Control over the Oneida Nation
James R. Bittorf and Arlinda F. Locklear
9 Rebuilding the Nation’s Land Base, One Fee-to-Trust Application at a Time
Rebecca M. Webster
Conclusion: “Dear Sir: I Am an Oneida Indian Living on the Reservation”
Rebecca M. Webster
Glossary of Key Terms
Notes
Index
REQUEST ACCESSIBLE FILE
If you are a student who cannot use this book in printed form, BiblioVault may be able to supply you
with an electronic file for alternative access.
Please have the accessibility coordinator at your school fill out this form.