article

A Chippewa Case: resource control and self-determination

Cultural survival quarterly11 (2) • Published In 1987 • Pages: 39-42

By: Handrick, Philip.

Abstract
This is a short article discussing contradictions in the 1972 Indian Self-Determination Act, which resulted in the wholesale slaughter of the wall-eye breeding population in Chiquamegon Bay, Wisconsin. Wall-eye are a staple of the local Bad River Band of Chippewa. The Indian Self-Determination Act gave Indians responsibilities to regulate local resources and in 1974 the Bad River Band established a fish hatchery for wall-eye. However, the right to protect this resource within the reservation on non-Indian property or outside the reservation were circumvented by state ordinances limiting native landrights. Frustrated by the band administration's inability to protect the wall-eye, some band members decided to get all the wall-eye they could, resulting in the destruction of half the breeding population in 1982. Since then, rulings have favored the Bad River Band's control of resources both on and off the reservation.
Subjects
Fishing
Marine industries
Real property
External relations
Public welfare
Legal norms
Property offenses
culture
Ojibwa
HRAF PubDate
2000
Region
North America
Sub Region
Arctic and Subarctic
Document Type
article
Evaluation
Creator Type
Ethnographer
Document Rating
4: Excellent Secondary Data
5: Excellent Primary Data
Analyst
Ian Skoggard ; 1998
Field Date
1982-1987
Coverage Date
1974-1987
Coverage Place
Twentieth Century Ojibwa, Chequamegon Bay, Wisconsin, United States
Notes
Philip Handrick
LCCN
8964755
LCSH
Ojibwa Indians