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Too often the stories told about Indigenous peoples flatten the complexity of Native nation experiences, especially around environmental sovereignty and relationality. This chapter explores the deep politics behind the building and dismantling of an industrial wind farm on the Osage reservation, as a powerful window into the complexity of these issues. Colonial systems have rendered Osages a minority population in our own territory, forcing our leaders to build fraught relationships to maintain our Nation. This chapter looks at how Osage relationships with the federal government and non-Osage residents living on the reservation have impacted Osage sovereignty. In this context, the Osage Nation has attempted to use the concepts of “responsibility” and “public interest” to defend its sovereignty, which have had mixed results historically, and must be navigated carefully as a strategy to take us forward
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- The Department of Anthropology
- Princeton American Indian and Indigenous Studies Working Group (PAIISWG)
- Native Graduate Students of Princeton
- Native American and Indigenous Studies Initiative at Princeton (NAISIP)
- Land, Language, and Art (LLA)
- Effron Center for the Study of America