Provides a detailed examination of the Omahas' tenacious efforts to overcome the damaging effects of shifting directions in federal policy during the last fifty years
Mark R. Scherer is an adjunct instructor of history at the University of Nebraska, an instructor of law at the College of Saint Mary, and a practicing attorney.
"An important book... Imperfect Victories is a welcome contribution to Native American history. Scherer has written a compelling account of how the Omahas escaped Public law 280, redressed historical wrongs through the Indian Claims Commission, and participated in the Red Power movement to regain control over valuable tribal property. This book will be of special interest to scholars, policymakers, attorneys, and Indians interested in the origins of the self-determination movement."-Kenneth R. Philp, Law and History Review -- Law and History Review Law and History Review "The book is a revelation of the cultural and legal complexities of modern tribal existence... This book offers both an outsider's view and an insider's view of the factionalism and turmoil within the Omaha tribe. The author has presented a complex story in an understandable manner. For those keeping abreast of modern federal-Indian relations, his book is an important contribution."-Donald L. Fixico, American Historical Review -- American Historical Review American Historical Review "[Imperfect Victories] masterfully demonstrates how the experiences of Nebraska's Omahas are indicative of national patterns... In a concise volume, Mark R. Scherer offers a well-crafted piece of legal history. He intricately weaves personal interviews with Omaha participants throughout his consideration of United States Indian policy as offered in the works of leading scholars from Vine Deloria, Jr., to Donald Fixico."-W. Ben Secunda, Chronicles of Oklahoma -- Chronicles of Oklahoma Chronicles of Oklahoma
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