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Box 3

 Container

Contains 4 Results:

"Let me tell you about Indian libraries" : self-determination, leadership, and vision -- the basis of tribal library development in the United States, 2018

 File — Box: 3
Identifier: SC053 03/01
Overview Tribal libraries in the United States have become sites of cultural and language renewal, gathering places, and places to collect, preserve, and share Indigenous knowledge. After more than forty years of development, tribal libraries have become important sites of decolonization, where sovereignty and self-determination are paramount. These libraries are relatively recent tools that Native (and non-Native) people have begun to employ to collect, preserve, and transmit Indigenous knowledge...
Dates: Publication: 2018

Library services to Indigenous populations: A bibliography, 2001

 Item — Box: 3
Identifier: SC053 03/02
Scope and Contents

Bibliogprahy printed from University of Michigan website, 6/1/2001.

Dates: 2001

Wilson Library Bulletin, April 1989

 Item — Box: 3
Identifier: SC053 03/03
Scope and Contents

Contains article, "Native American Libraires, Ten Years Later," by Frankie Pelzman.

Dates: Publication: April 1989

Dr. Lotsee Patterson papers

 Collection — Multiple Containers
Identifier: SC053
Overview

Materials related to the advocacy, creation, and implementation of the Protocols for Native American Archival Materials, tribal libraries and librarianship, advocacy for tribal libraries, and Dr. Lotsee Patterson (Comanche). The Protocols are best practices, standards and goals for North American archives that steward materials related to Native Americans to commit to and implement culturally responsive care and use of Native American resources held by non-tribal organizations.

Dates: 2005-2007