User:Savannah35/Blood quantum laws/Bibliography
You will be compiling your bibliography and creating an outline of the changes you will make in this sandbox.
Bibliography
As you gather the sources for your Wikipedia contribution, think about the following:
|
This articles take more about the basic information to get me thinking more on blood quantum.
This article would help me to understand the policy and how these policy or laws that came to be. It also me information on why the government made the laws and how it effect native American back than and how it effect them now.
This article shows and example how what is blood quantum and how would you measure the amount of native American percent that you have.
This articles also goes over policy and laws so I can understand better information how the laws effect native American and what was the big idea from the laws that the government did and how did it impact native's.
This article would help me get a background onto the blood quantum laws. How they can tell if there native American or not.
Bibliography
editEdit this section to compile the bibliography for your Wikipedia assignment. Add the name and/or notes about what each source covers, then use the "Cite" button to generate the citation for that source.
Examples:
|
References
edit- ^ Hill, Norbert (2017). Ratteree, Kathleen (ed.). The great vanishing act: blood quantum and the future of native nations (2nd ed.). CO: Golden, Colorado : Fulcrum Publishing. ISBN 9781682750650.
{{cite book}}
: CS1 maint: date and year (link) - ^ Ellinghaus, Katherine (2017). Blood Will Tell: Native Americans and Assimilation Policy. Nebraska: Lincoln, Nebraska : University of Nebraska. ISBN 9781496230379.
{{cite book}}
: CS1 maint: date and year (link) - ^ TallBear, Kim (2003-12-03). "Can DNA determine who is American Indian?". Oneida, N.Y: Indian Country Today.
- ^ Miller, Tommy. "Beyond blood quantum: the Legal and Political Implications of Expanding Tribal Enrollment". American Indian Law Journal. 3 (1): 323–357.
- ^ Green, Keneisha M. "Who's Who: Exploring the Discrepancy between the Methods of Defining African American and Native Americans". American Indian Law Review. 31 (1): 93–110.
Outline of proposed changes
editClick on the edit button to draft your outline.
Now that you have compiled a bibliography, it's time to plan out how you'll improve your assigned article.
In this section, write up a concise outline of how the sources you've identified will add relevant information to your chosen article. Be sure to discuss what content gap your additions tackle and how these additions will improve the article's quality. Consider other changes you'll make to the article, including possible deletions of irrelevant, outdated, or incorrect information, restructuring of the article to improve its readability or any other change you plan on making. This is your chance to really think about how your proposed additions will improve your chosen article and to vet your sources even further. Note: This is not a draft. This is an outline/plan where you can think about how the sources you've identified will fill in a content gap. |