Ute Mountain Ute - Bureau of Indian Affairs - bia 2025

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Many native peoples continue to oppose policies of the BIA. In particular, problems in enforcing treaties, handling records and trust land incomes were disputed.
In the years between 1849 and 1947, what is now called the Bureau of Indian Affairs was known under various names, including the Indian Office, the Indian Bureau, the Indian Department, and the Indian Service. The Department of the Interior formally adopted the name Bureau of Indian Affairs in 1947.
The Ute Mountain Ute Tribe lies within the southwest corner of the State of Colorado. The Tribe has 575,000 contiguous acres, which span into the states of New Mexico and Utah.
Formally established in 1824, the Bureau of Indian Affairs (BIA) has roots and precedence originating in the founding of the United States. The earliest form of what would evolve into the BIA is often credited as the Committee on Indian Affairs, which was created by the Continental Congress in 1775.
In addition to controlling trade, the bureau was responsible for settling disputes between Native Americans and European Americans, as well as for appropriating funds from Congress to fund efforts by the Indian agents to acculturate Native Americans into European American society.
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The bureau was renamed from Office of Indian Affairs to Bureau of Indian Affairs in 1947. With the rise of American Indian activism in the 1960s and 1970s and increasing demands for enforcement of treaty rights and sovereignty, the 1970s were a particularly turbulent period of BIA history.
The Bureau of Indian Affairs (BIA) is the primary federal agency charged with carrying out the United States trust responsibility to American Indian and Alaska Native people, maintaining the federal government-to-government relationship with the federally recognized Indian tribes, and promoting and supporting tribal

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