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Academic Partnerships with Native American Communities

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Title: Academic Partnerships with Native American Communities


1
Academic Partnerships with Native American
Communities
  • Presented by
  • Sara L. Young, Montana State University

2
American Indian Tribes in the U.S.
  • There are 562 federally recognized American
    Indian tribes in the U.S.
  • The majority of these tribes have sovereign
    nation status they have their own tribal
    governments which conduct government to
    government relations with other levels of
    government (federal, state and local)
  • Each tribe has its own unique culture, language,
    practices and economic situations and although
    there are similarities between some tribes there
    are many differences

Crow Fair
Photo source http//www.drumhop.com/CrowFair.htm
l
3
Crow Tribe of Indians of Montana the Apsaalooke
Nation
  • Located in south central Montana with 2 million
    acres within the exterior boundaries the
    original treaty boundaries included 32 million
    square acres. Today the reservation is about 60
    miles by 40 miles.
  • Current tribal enrollment is at 11,500
  • The majority of tribal members residing on the
    reservation receive their medical care at the
    Indian Health Service facilities on the
    reservation
  • clinics at three sites and one hospital
  • Little Big Horn College has an enrollment of
    approximately 250 tribal students working on
    associate arts degrees in several areas, many of
    whom are interested in biomedical and
    environmental health fields

http//montanafilm.com/crowres_03.htm
4
Montana has 7 reservations
http//lewisandclark.state.mt.us/visitres.htm
5
U.S. Federal and State Indian Reservations
http//www.infoplease.com/i
pa/A0778676.html
6
Tribal Population 2000 US Census
  • Apache96,833
  • Blackfeet85,750
  • Cherokee729,533
  • Cheyenne18,204
  • Chickasaw38,351
  • Choctaw158,774Colville9,393
  • Comanche19,376
  • Chippewa149,669
  • Cree7,734
  • Creek71,310
  • Crow13,394
  • Delaware16,341
  • Houma8,713
  • Iroquois80,822
  • Kiowa12,242
  • Latin American Indian180,940
  • Lumbee57,868
  • Menominee9,840
  • Navajo298,197
  • Pueblo74,085
  • Puget Sound
  • Salish14,631
  • Seminole27,431
  • Shoshone12,026
  • Sioux153,360
  • TohonoO'odham20,087
  • Ute10,385
  • Yakama10,851
  • Yaqui22,412
  • Yuman8,976
  • Other specified American Indian tribes357,658
  • American Indian tribe, not specified195,902
  • AlaskaAthabascan18,838
  • Aleut16,978
  • Eskimo54,761
  • Tlingit-Haida22,365
  • Other specified Alaska Native tribes3,973
  • Alaska Native tribe, not specified8,702

1. The numbers by American Indian and Alaska
Native tribes do not add up to the total
population figure because respondents may have
put down more than one tribe. Respondents
reporting several tribes are counted several
times. 2. Total includes American Indian and
Alaska Natives alone or in combination with other
tribal groups or races. Indian and Alaskan Native
population alone in 2000 was 2,475,956.
Source U.S. Census Bureau, Census 2000.
7
Potential Partners Tribal Colleges and
Universities
  • Institution State
    Highest Degree Offered
  • BAY MILLS COMMUNITY COLLEGE MI Associate's
  • BLACKFEET COMMUNITY COLLEGE MT Associate's
  • CANKDESKA CIKANA COMMUNITY COLLEGE ND Associate's
  • CHIEF DULL KNIFE COLLEGE MT Associate's
  • COLLEGE OF MENOMINEE NATION WI Associate's
  • COMANCHE NATION COLLEGE OK Associate's
  • CROWNPOINT INSTITUTE OF TECHNOLOGY NM Associate's
  • DINÉ COLLEGE AZ Associate's
  • FOND DU LAC TRIBAL AND COMMUNITY COLLEGE MN
    Bachelor's
  • FORT BELKNAP COLLEGE MT Associate's
  • FORT BERTHOLD COMMUNITY COLLEGE ND Associate's
  • FORT PECK COMMUNITY COLLEGE MT Associate's
  • HASKELL INDIAN NATIONS UNIVERSITY KS Bachelor's
  • INSTITUTE OF AMERICAN INDIAN AND ALASKA NATIVE
  • CULTURE NM Bachelor's
  • KEWEENAW BAY OJIBWA COMMUNITY COLLEGE MI
    Associate's
  • LAC COURTE OREILLES OJIBWA COMMUNITY COLLEGE WI
    Associate's
  • LEECH LAKE TRIBAL COLLEGE MN Associate's
  • Institution State
    Highest Degree Offered
  • LITTLE BIG HORN COLLEGE MT Associate's
  • LITTLE PRIEST TRIBAL COLLEGE NE Associate's
  • NEBRASKA INDIAN COMMUNITY COLLEGE NE Associate's
  • NORTHWEST INDIAN COLLEGE WA Associate's
  • OGLALA LAKOTA COLLEGE SD Master's
  • SAGINAW CHIPPEWA TRIBAL COLLEGE MI Associate's
  • SALISH KOOTENAI COLLEGE MT Bachelor's
  • SINTE GLESKA UNIVERSITY SD Master's
  • SISSETON WAHPETON COLLEGE SD Associate's
  • SITTING BULL COLLEGE ND Bachelor's
  • SOUTHWESTERN INDIAN POLYTECHNIC INSTITUTE NM
    Associate's
  • STONE CHILD COLLEGE MT Associate's
  • TOHONO O'ODHAM COMMUNITY COLLEGE AZ Associate's
  • TURTLE MOUNTAIN COMMUNITY COLLEGE ND Bachelor's
  • UNITED TRIBES TECHNICAL COLLEGE ND Associate's
  • WHITE EARTH TRIBAL AND COMMUNITY COLLEGE MN
    Associate's
  • WIND RIVER TRIBAL COLLEGE WY Associate's
  • Indicates a tribal college is seeking formal
    accreditation candidacy status

Source http//www.aihec.org
8
Tribal College and University (TCU) Demographic
Information
  • 34 tribal colleges in 13 states
  • 8 TCUs offer baccalaureate programs 2 offer
  • masters degree programs and all offer
  • associate degree programs.
  • 27,000 academic students annually tens of
  • thousands more through community outreach
  • 80 of the students are enrolled in federally
  • recognized tribes
  • 67 Female
  • 59 Full-time

Tribal College and University Student
Demographics
Source http//www.aihec.org
9
  • Nashville Area
  • Navajo Area
  • Oklahoma Area
  • Phoenix Area
  • Portland Area
  • Aberdeen Area
  • Alaska Area
  • Albuquerque Area
  • Billings Area
  • California Area

Source http//www.nihb.org/index.php
10
NCAI National Congress of American Indians
  • Cowlitz Indian Tribe NorthwestJohn Barnett
    (Chairman)Tel (360) 577-8140Fax (360)
    577-7432P.O. Box 2547Longview, WA
    98632-8594Website www.cowlitz.orgCoyote
  • Valley Band of Pomo Indians PacificJohn Feliz,
    Jr. (Chairman)Tel (707) 485-8723Fax (707)
    485-1247P.O. Box 39Redwood Valley, CA
    95470Website www.coyotevalleycasino.com
  • Craig Community Association (IRA) AlaskaA.
    Millie Stevens (President)Tel (907)
    826-3996Fax (907) 826-3997P.O. Box 828Craig,
    AK 99921
  • Crooked Creek Traditional Council AlaskaJohnny
    John (President)Tel (907) 432-2201Fax (907)
    432-2200P.O. Box 69Crooked Creek, AK 99575
  • Crow Creek Sioux Tribe Great PlainsLester
    Thompson, Jr. (Chairman)Tel (605) 245-2221Fax
    (605) 245-2470P.O. Box 50Fort Thompson, SD 57339
  • Crow Nation Rocky MountainCarl E. Venne
    (Chairman)Tel (406) 638-3715Fax (406)
    638-3773P.O. Box 159Crow Agency, MT 59022
  • NCAIs webpage gives a list of the contact
    information for over 250 member tribes this is
    just a sample of some of the tribes listed.
  • In many cases, a tribal resolution approving the
    research project will be required prior to
    gaining approval from an IRB of a regional I.H.S.
    office.

Tribal Governments
Source http//www.ncai.org/Tribal_Governments.11
9.0.html?no_cache1print1
11
Urban Indians
  • Throughout the U.S. there are a number of
    clusters of Native Americans living in urban
    areas that have their own inter-tribal
    communities with urban Indian clinics or other
    healthcare facilities governed by Native American
    boards that are another source of potential
    partnerships. More Native Americans actually
    reside off the reservation than live on but
    they are a little harder to find and generally
    include groups of many different tribes. Their
    community population may or may not maintain
    close ties to their extended families, tribes and
    cultural ways.

12
IRBs
  • Many tribes and/or tribal colleges have developed
    or are in the process of developing their own
    IRBs which researchers need to work with for
    projects involving tribal members or tribal data
  • When a tribe or tribal college does not have an
    IRB in place researchers generally are required
    to go through the IRB process with the area
    office of the Indian Health Service
  • If the research will involve working with any
    data, patients, staff or facilities of the
    I.H.S., researchers need to seek approval from
    both the tribal IRB and the I.H.S. IRB

13
So how do we develop partnerships?
  • Respect, collegiality, trust, equality,
    communication, commitment, sincere interest in
    working with the tribe, development of a minimal
    level of understanding about the tribes history
    prior to making contact if possible
  • The rule is to talk to tribes before the pencil
    hits the paper, not when the document is ready to
    be signed in ink. Reno Charette, Coord. of
    Indian Affairs for the State of Montana

14
Is CBPR the only way, the best way?
  • No, community based participatory research
    approaches are not the only way to establish
    academic partnerships with Native American
    communities but CBPR does provide a good approach
    to building a trust relationship with individual
    community groups or tribes.

15
Messengers for Health
  • A community-based participatory research project
    between Dr. Suzanne Christopher, a faculty member
    at Montana State University, and the Crow Nation
    that began 5 years ago to increase the
    participation of Crow women in cervical cancer
    screening and has now expanded to cover a broader
    area of addressing health disparities. The
    project is funded by the American Cancer Society.

16
Montana Consortium for Community- Based Research
in Native American Health
  • Established as a result of many requests from
    community groups within the Crow Nation,
    community groups in other Montana reservations
    and faculty from both the Montana State
    University and University of Montana campuses for
    more partnerships to conduct collaborative
    research between the universities and Native
    communities.

17
Proposal submitted to NIH
  • Linking Native American community partners,
    university partners and other research partners
    to develop community based participatory research
    projects that will address specific health
    disparities affecting Native American communities
  • If funded, the project will fund up to 25
    planning grants throughout Montanas seven
    reservations over a 5 year period through the
    establishment of an exploratory center.

18
How do academic partnerships develop when the
reservations are so far from the university and
urban Native communities are not always easy to
locate ?
  • Working with universities that have Native
    American Studies departments and can provide
    information on Native communities in the region
  • Identifying I.H.S. regions with health
    disparities that fall into research areas of
    interest to you and making contacts through
    either the I.H.S. Area Office, the Area Tribal
    Health Board or the tribal health board
  • Establishing a collaboration with an investigator
    who has already developed a positive working
    relationship with Native communities and/or TCUs.

19
Native American Health Disparities
  • Need for research to address the broad range of
    health disparities impacting Native American
    people.
  • Tribes are requiring a more significant role in
    research on or about their tribal members.
  • Tribes recognize the need to partner with
    academic researchers to overcome the health
    disparities.

20
Thank you for your interest in fostering
collaborations with a diverse population impacted
by health disparities.
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