Academic literature on the topic 'North Dakota Council on the Arts and Humanities'

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Journal articles on the topic "North Dakota Council on the Arts and Humanities"

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Cozzetto, Don A., and Brent W. LaRocque. "Compulsive Gambling in the Indian Community: A North Dakota Case Study." American Indian Culture and Research Journal 20, no. 1 (January 1, 1996): 73–86. http://dx.doi.org/10.17953/aicr.20.1.eg068851769t817q.

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Wood, W. Raymond. "Integrating Ethnohistory and Archaeology at Fort Clark State Historic Site, North Dakota." American Antiquity 58, no. 3 (July 1993): 544–59. http://dx.doi.org/10.2307/282113.

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A two-year mapping project at Fort Clark State Historic Site produced a 15-cm contour map of the Native American (Mandan and Arikara) earthlodge village and a planimetric map of that part of the historic district that lies above the Missouri River flood plain. Aerial photography and ground-level transit mapping detected more than 2,200 surface features at the site, including 86 earthlodges, 2 fur-trading posts, hundreds of storage and grave pits, and Euroamerican and Native American roads and trails. More than 80 percent of the site as mapped lies outside the fortification ditch of the Mandan/Arikara village. When we are trying to determine the potential impact on sites such as this one of such activities as nearby road construction, our recommendations must consider the broader context of the site, not simply the narrow spectrum provided by the settlement core area. A buffer zone as presently exists at Fort Clark is not only necessary to preserve its visual integrity but also to preserve the record of the activities that took place in its immediate vicinity.
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Kvamme, Kenneth L., and Stanley A. Ahler. "Integrated Remote Sensing and Excavation at Double Ditch State Historic Site, North Dakota." American Antiquity 72, no. 3 (July 2007): 539–61. http://dx.doi.org/10.2307/40035860.

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A four-year program of remote sensing at the Double Ditch State Historic Site (32BL8) demonstrates the utility of combined prospecting methods for understanding complex settlements when combined with traditional excavation methods. Magnetic gradiometry revealed countless subterranean storage pits, hearths, and two previously unknown fortification systems that vastly increase the settlement's area and projected population to perhaps 2,000 individuals. Electrical resistance surveys helped define middens, other depositional areas, houses, and earth-borrowing pits. Ground-penetrating radar yielded details about ditch, house, and mounded midden interior forms. Aerial survey from a powered parachute acquired high-resolution digital color and thermal infrared imagery. The former distinguished houses, borrow pits, and ditches from middens and fill areas by changes in vegetation; the latter did the same through temperature variations that also highlighted historic excavations. High-resolution topographic survey allowed documentation of topographic expressions caused by ditches, houses, borrow pits, and mounds. The remote sensing program reduced excavation costs by targeting features. Excavations confirmed anomaly identifications and established a chronology that documents late-fifteenth-century origins to an ultimate contraction in the eighteenth century, with abandonment after a smallpox outbreak about A.D. 1785. Evidence suggests that large mounds formed integral components of the village"s defenses. Excavations also reveal extensive earth moving for mound building, earthlodge coverings, and other reasons still unclear. This practice caused the truncation or obliteration of many earlier archaeological features and forces realization that long-occupied settlements were fluid through time with continual reworking of deposits, and complex depositional, use, and formation histories.
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Tauxe, Caroline. "Family cohesion vs. capitalist hegemony: Cultural accommodation on the north Dakota farm." Dialectical Anthropology 17, no. 3 (1992): 291–317. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/bf00243367.

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Hunt, Valerie H., Melissa A. Taylor, and Daniel “Ramon” Cox. "Remembering the Forgotten Minority: An Analysis of American Indian Employment Patterns in State and Local Government, 1991–2011." American Indian Culture and Research Journal 43, no. 1 (January 1, 2019): 31–54. http://dx.doi.org/10.17953/aicrj.43.1.hunt-taylor-cox.

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For the eight states with the greatest percentages of American Indian and Alaskan Native (AIAN) populations—Alaska, Arizona, Montana, New Mexico, North Dakota, Oklahoma, South Dakota, and Wyoming—we use 24 years (1991–2015) of US Equal Employment Opportunity Commission data to examine whether AIANs are overrepresented in the lower paying, less desirable, non-managerial, public sector positions in local and state government bureaucracies and underrepresented in the more desirable, better paying, managerial positions (e.g., administrative and professional positions). In both workforces, we examine if levels of descriptive representation within the states changed over time. We find AIANs continue to suffer pervasive and persistent occupational segregation in non-managerial levels of bureaucratic organizations, in each state except Oklahoma. Across time in managerial ranks, we observe slight improvement in three states—Arizona, New Mexico, and Oklahoma—and declining job shares in the remaining five states.
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Hanlon, Mark J., Stephen Larson, and Sandy Zacher. "The Minnesota SOST and Sexual Reoffending in North Dakota: A Retrospective Study." International Journal of Offender Therapy and Comparative Criminology 43, no. 1 (January 1999): 71–77. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/0306624x99431007.

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Schroedel, Jean Reith, Joey Torres, Andrea Walters, and Joseph Dietrich. "The Voting Rights Act's Pre-Clearance Provisions: The Experience of Native Americans in South Dakota." American Indian Culture and Research Journal 41, no. 4 (July 1, 2017): 1–21. http://dx.doi.org/10.17953/aicrj.41.4.schroedel.

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During the 1965 debates over the Voting Rights Act, there are only two brief mentions of Native Americans. During the Act's 1975 renewal, Native Americans were mentioned only with respect to their inclusion under the minority language provisions. At no point did the applicability of Section 5's pre-clearance provisions to political jurisdictions with histories of discrimination against Native Americans generate discussion. They also were ignored in the Supreme Court's 2013 Shelby County v. Holder decision, where Section 4(b) that established the criteria for establishing Section 5 covered jurisdictions was found to be unconstitutional. In this paper, we examine struggles over Section 5 pre-clearance in South Dakota, as well as the challenges of legal attempts to establish “covered jurisdictions” using the more stringent standard required in Section 2. We focus on South Dakota because it is a state with a long, troubled history of discrimination towards Native peoples. It also is the state with the highest number of voting rights cases involving Native Americans. Although a state that has been labeled “the Mississippi of the North” is an extreme case, we argue that it is precisely those settings that make pre-clearance so critical.
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Burd, L., M. Williams, M. G. Klug, K. Fjelstad, A. Schimke, and J. Kerbeshian. "Prevalence of psychotropic and anticonvulsant drug use among North Dakota group home residents." Journal of Intellectual Disability Research 41, no. 6 (December 1997): 488–94. http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/j.1365-2788.1997.tb00741.x.

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Maristuen-Rodakowski, Julie. "The Turtle Mountain Reservation in North Dakota: Its History as Depicted in Louise Erdrich's Love Medicine and Beet Queen." American Indian Culture and Research Journal 12, no. 3 (January 1, 1988): 33–48. http://dx.doi.org/10.17953/aicr.12.3.r08660v62325u887.

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Wishart, David J., and Oliver Froehling. "Land Ownership, Population, and Jurisdiction: The Case of the Devils Lake Sioux Tribe v. North Dakota Public Service Commission." American Indian Culture and Research Journal 20, no. 2 (January 1, 1996): 33–58. http://dx.doi.org/10.17953/aicr.20.2.cx721603357142j8.

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Dissertations / Theses on the topic "North Dakota Council on the Arts and Humanities"

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Walch, Barbara Hunter. "Sallye B. Mathis and Mary L. Singleton: Black pioneers on the Jacksonville, Florida, City Council." UNF Digital Commons, 1988. https://digitalcommons.unf.edu/etd/704.

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In 1967 Sallye Brooks Mathis and Mary Littlejohn Singleton were elected the first blacks in sixty years, and the first women ever, to the city council of Jacksonville, Florida. These two women had been raised in Jacksonville in a black community which, in spite of racial discrimination and segregation since the Civil War, had demonstrated positive leadership and cooperative action as it developed its own organizations and maintained a thriving civic life. Jacksonville blacks participated in politics when allowed to do so and initiated several economic boycotts and court suits to resist racial segregation. Black women played an important part in these activities--occasionally in visible leadership roles. As adults, Sallye Mathis and Mary Singleton· participated as educators, family members and leaders in various community efforts. Both had developed wide contacts and were respected among many blacks and whites. Mary Singleton had learned about politics as the wife of a respected black politician, and Sallye Mathis became a leader in the civil rights struggles of the 1960s in Jacksonville. In 1967, a governmental reform movement in Duval County, a softening of negative racial attitudes, and perhaps their being female aided their victories. While Sallye Mathis remained on the Jacksonville City Council for fifteen years until her death in 1982, Mary Singleton served in the Florida House of Representatives from 1972 to 1976--the third black in the twentieth century and the first woman from Northeast Florida. From 1976 to 1978 she was appointed director of the Florida Division of Elections and in 1978 she campaigned unsuccessfully for Lt. Governor of Florida. As government officials, Sallye Mathis and Mary Singleton emphasized the needs of low-income people and were advocates for black interests when they felt it was necessary. They were active as volunteers in numerous other community organizations and projects to further their goals. PALMM
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Books on the topic "North Dakota Council on the Arts and Humanities"

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An illustrated history of the arts in South Dakota. Sioux Falls, S.D: Center for Western Studies, Augustana College, 1989.

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Book chapters on the topic "North Dakota Council on the Arts and Humanities"

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Smith, Helen, and Mark Hope. "Legacy and lavender: community heritage and the arts." In Heritage as Community Research, 107–26. Policy Press, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.1332/policypress/9781447345299.003.0006.

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This chapter studies how new perspectives on organisational practices are revealed when participants in an arts practice research project decide to focus on a local heritage subject. The Lavender Project, as this arts project became known, is a case study in an Arts and Humanities Research Council Connected Communities collaborative doctoral award between Robert Gordon University and community partner Woodend Barn, a rural arts centre in the North East of Scotland. The chapter shows how participants with different roles across their organisation reflect critically together upon difficult and complex topics, including the future direction of their arts centre. The dialogues are characterised by humour and metaphor, referencing the heritage subject and their experience of this research process. These reflections shed light on how collaborative participatory arts research, when combined with a local heritage subject identified by the participants, can open new spaces for criticality between communities, generating durable, negotiated change.
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