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Stacy L Leeds, leading educator in Indian law, joins ASU Law
asu.edu - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from asu.edu Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
The Social Order
In late 2014, I met with Naftuli Moster, a bright and charismatic graduate student at Hunter College who grew up in Brooklyn’s Hasidic community. He was interested in studying Hasidic parents’ attitudes toward secular (nonreligious) education an area that I have long researched and written about.
I gave him the best guidance I could: how to write a survey, how to get buy-in from the community, whether to use Yiddish or English, and how to ensure that his sample was as representative as possible.
I eventually realized that his aim was not data collection. A month later, the
Tribal leaders optimistic about Biden; Haaland nomination a good start
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WASHINGTON – The federal government may not have a stellar track record when it comes to keeping promises with Native Americans, but tribal leaders in Arizona said they think President-elect Joe Biden could be the exception.
Their hopes were reinforced last week when Biden nominated a Native woman, Rep. Deb Haaland, D-N.M., to be secretary of Interior. If approved, she would be the first
Native American Cabinet secretary.
Reaction from Tohono O’odham Nation Chairman Ned Norris Jr., who welcomed “the historic nomination of Congresswoman Haaland,” was typical of tribal responses.
“She will bring a unique and long overdue perspective to the department, as well as a fierce determination to protect our environment and the rights of indigenous people,” Norris said in a statement Friday. “The Nation urges the Senate to quickly hold hearings and approve her nomination so she can get to work right away.”
Arizona PBS
Dec. 23, 2020
National Congress of American Indians President Fawn Sharp, left, posing in February with Rep. Deb Haaland, D-N.M., who has been nominated by President-elect Joe Biden to be Interior secretary. NCAI, like most tribal organizations, welcomed the nomination of Haaland – who would be the first Native American to be a Cabinet secretary – as a good omen for relations with the Biden administration. (File photo by McKenzie Sadeghi/Cronkite News)
One of five stories in the series, “Hello, Joe: How Biden policies may be felt in Arizona.”
WASHINGTON – The federal government may not have a stellar track record when it comes to keeping promises with Native Americans, but tribal leaders in Arizona said they think President-elect Joe Biden could be the exception.
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