Publication | Closed Access
Effects of land dispossession and forced migration on Indigenous peoples in North America
187
Citations
21
References
2021
Year
Human MigrationHistorical GeographyColonialismNative Environmental SovereigntyLand UseAgricultural EconomicsIndigenous PeoplesIndigenous Land DensityIndigenous PeopleIndigenous MovementLand DegradationSocial SciencesIndigenous StudyForced MigrationIndigenous HistoryLand RedistributionLanguage StudiesLand Use PlanningPopulation DisplacementLandscape ProcessesIndigenous CulturesLand DevelopmentGeographyLand DispossessionPopulation MigrationMan-land RelationshipIndigenous Knowledge SystemsNatural Resource ManagementIndigenous StudiesLand ManagementAnthropologyDemographyNorth AmericaPopulation Movement
What are the full extent and long-term effects of land dispossession and forced migration for Indigenous peoples in North America? We leveraged a new dataset of Indigenous land dispossession and forced migration to statistically compare features of historical tribal lands to present-day tribal lands at the aggregate and individual tribe level. Results show a near-total aggregate reduction of Indigenous land density and spread. Indigenous peoples were forced to lands that are more exposed to climate change risks and hazards and are less likely to lie over valuable subsurface oil and gas resources. Agricultural suitability and federal land proximity results—which affect Indigenous movements, management, and traditional uses—are mixed. These findings have substantial policy implications related to heightened climate vulnerability, extensive land reduction, and diminished land value.
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