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ContributorsThe Pride Publishing Company (Contributor)
Created1977-03-12
DescriptionSelected articles: Editors Notes; The LoveBug; The Back Door Club Bath; Realistic Pencil Drawings by Rob; Nu Vue
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ContributorsThe Pride Publishing Company (Contributor)
Created1977-10-15
DescriptionSelected articles: Joanne's dressing room; Tuscon Court Does it Right; Anita, Dear, You Never Looked So Good; Drug Billed As Aphrodisiac Taken In Book Store Raid; The Club Phoenix
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ContributorsThe Pride Publishing Company (Contributor)
Created1978-05-18
DescriptionSelected article titles: Lesbian Mother Awarded Custody; A Dragon Lives Forever…The Pride Interviews Dragon Lady and Alter-ego, Tom Clark; Black's Beach; St. Paul, Wichita Voters Ax Civil Rights for Gays; Coors Beer Boycott to Continue
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ContributorsThe Pride Publishing Company (Contributor)
Created1978-11-03
DescriptionSelected article titles: Governor Babbitt answers, "Yes"; "Who Cares, Anyway?"; It's Up To You!!; Progress Toward Reform; H.E.R.O.E.S.
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ContributorsThe Pride Publishing Company (Contributor)
Created1977-09-15
DescriptionSelected article titles: From the mouth of the dragon, Joanne's dressing room, A message from Phil, Jakki, D.j. honored in New York, Miss Matty's Attic Grand Opening
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ContributorsAustin, Diane E. (Author) / Gerlak, Sherri (Author) / Smith, Carolyn (Author) / The Pride Publishing Company (Publisher)
Created2000-11-25
Description

Tribes have a direct government-to-government relationship with the U.S. government wherein no decisions about their lands and people are made without their consent. In Arizona, for example, American Indian reservations occupy nearly 30 percent of the land. Native Americans have a legal and moral claim to significant quantities of water

Tribes have a direct government-to-government relationship with the U.S. government wherein no decisions about their lands and people are made without their consent. In Arizona, for example, American Indian reservations occupy nearly 30 percent of the land. Native Americans have a legal and moral claim to significant quantities of water as well. Because of their special legal standing in the United States, tribes are not just another group of stakeholders to be considered in the research and policy process. The purpose of this paper is to provide a legal and political background for interactions between the United States and tribal governments and provide models for those interactions, with special attention to research and outreach.