Native American Asset Watch: Rethinking Asset-Building in Indian Country

Native American Asset Watch: Rethinking Asset-Building in Indian Country

First Nations Development Institute’s Native American Asset Watch Initiative is a comprehensive strategy for systemic economic change, which seeks to provide a range of support for efforts by Native communities to reclaim direct control of their assets and re-establish sustainable approaches to the use of land and natural resources. This investigative report, funded by the Kendeda Sustainability Fund of the Tides Foundation, explores the asset stripping purpose and effects of federal Indian law and policies, discusses existing mainstream asset-building models and then proposes a model for asset-building in Indian Country.

Download the Report, Executive Summary and Case Studies

     
  
Native American Asset Watch: Rethinking Asset-Building in Indian Country (2009) (1.6 MB)
 
Executive Summary (3.3 MB)
 
Case Study 1: The Water Assets of “The River People” - A Case Study of the Gila River Indian Community (734 KB)
     
 
 
Case Study 2: Building a Water and Energy Homeland Three Affiliated Tribes (Mandan, Hidatsa and Arikara Tribes) Ft. Berthold Indian Reservation, North Dakota - A Case Study on Tribal Natural Resource Asset Control, Management and Protection (394 MB)
 
Case Study 3: Western Shoshone Defense Project (330 KB)
 Case Study 4: Native Water Rights and Resources: Managing The Trust Asset Wind River Indian Reservation - A Case Study in the Management and Protection of Tribal Water Resource Assets (492 KB)
     
   
Case Study 5: Confederated Tribes of the Umatilla Indian Reservation (201 KB) Case Study 6: Native American Asset Watch Initiative: Grantee Project Profiles (330 KB)