Liberty versus Bureaucracy on Native American Lands
Over the course of American history, a pervasive administrative state has emerged on Native American reservations as the result of unique institutions that govern those lands. The federal trust responsibility and an elaborate web of federal, state, and tribal policies affect the liberties and econom...
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Veröffentlicht in: | The Journal of private enterprise 2019-04, Vol.34 (1), p.87-101 |
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description | Over the course of American history, a pervasive administrative state has emerged on Native American reservations as the result of unique institutions that govern those lands. The federal trust responsibility and an elaborate web of federal, state, and tribal policies affect the liberties and economic well-being of Native Americans. These unique institutions impose high costs on individual Native Americans when they try to engage in most economic enterprises. This paper explores the complex institutional structure of Native American governance that increases poverty, limits entrepreneurship, and restricts individual liberty on a fundamental level. The pervasiveness of bureaucratic control has also spurred negative forms of political entrepreneurship, eroded the rule of law, and hampered markets from working efficiently. |
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language | eng |
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source | EBSCOhost Business Source Complete; Alma/SFX Local Collection |
subjects | Bureaucracy Civil rights Economic development Entrepreneurship Fair Housing Act 1968-US Federal government Miller, Robert J Native American culture Native American reservations Native Americans Native North Americans North American Indian lands Politics Poverty Private enterprise Privatization Property rights Rule of law State laws |
title | Liberty versus Bureaucracy on Native American Lands |
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