Tribal/Indigenous Sovereignty - Jill Stein

Started by AnthonyAú, Jul 07, 2024, 02:44 PM

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AnthonyAú

Jill Stein - Presidential Platform

Tribal/Indigenous Sovereignty

A Jill Stein Administration will guarantee as a human right the sovereignty of the Indigenous people of Turtle Island (today's U.S.A).

We recognize the history of broken treaties, stolen and occupied lands, and the desecration of the indigenous way of life, so our policies aim to redress harm through restorative justice.

A Jill Stein Administration will:

  • Honor all existing treaties with Indigenous nations

  • Ensure free, prior, and informed consent for any and all activity on tribal sovereign land

  • Establish a federal Land Back Commission

  • Create a task force of Tribal nations leaders to assess their needs for infrastructure, resources, education and economic development

  • Support a Truth and Reconciliation Commission and a reparations plan to address Indigenous people's economic dispossession

  • Amend the federal regulations to streamline the recognition process of Tribal Nations, Native Hawaiian Nation and other Pacific and Caribbean Islanders

  • Increase appointments to Tribal liaison positions, boards and commissions to ensure representation on all policies impacting Tribal Nations

  • Enforce the United Nations Declaration of the Rights of Indigenous People to require tribal consent for granting construction permits on treaty lands, waterways, and usual and accustomed areas

  • Prohibit all activities on sovereign territories without Free, Prior, and Informed Consent

  • Defend Tribal rights to regulate and manage their environment's natural resources

  • Mandate all property tax revenues from tribal (reservation) lands be shared with the tribes

  • Remove policies and practices that create barriers in upholding Native voting rights at all levels of government

  • Protect Native religious freedoms

  • Declare the second Monday in October as the Federal holiday "Indigenous Peoples Day"

  • Fund the Indian Health Service and establish at least one IHS clinic in each state

  • Increase and expand community health centers and behavioral and mental health services for Native youth

  • Establish an adequately funded medical facility in all reservations

  • Ensure the Department of Education fully funds and includes Tribal Sovereignty Curriculum developed by Tribal leaders in all states

  • Provide funding for judicial training on the Indian Child Welfare Act of 1978 to eliminate the loss of Native children's ties and identities to their families, cultures and homelands

  • Improve and align government policies and efforts, including data collection, to appropriately identify and classify American Indian/Alaska Native and multi-racial students

  • Expand funding for Tribal Compact Schools and address the disproportionate rates of drop-out, expulsion and suspension rates of Native students at the K-12 level

  • Expand access to Tribal Colleges and Universities, Native Studies programs in mainstream Colleges and Universities

  • Expand access to Tribal Colleges and Universities, Native Studies programs in mainstream Colleges and Universities

  • Officially recognize children lost to adoption under the Indian Relocation Act of 1952, tribal members who were dis-enrolled during the U.S. Indian Tribes termination policies (1940 to mid-1960), prior to the enactment of the Indian Child Welfare Act of 1978 and reunify them with their tribes and families

  • Ensure the rights of Tribal Nations to investigate and exercise criminal jurisdiction over non-Native citizens who commit domestic or sexual violence on Tribal lands in accordance with the Violence Against Women Act (VAWA)

  • Maintain and authorize the VAWA to fund and expand the specific Tribal Nations' provisions, such as judicial training

  • Improve and fund Native lands' justice systems to facilitate prosecution of non-natives accused of serious crimes

  • Ensure correct Native classification of Missing and Murdered Native women in the federal records

  • Increase tribal, federal, state and local cooperation to end the crisis of Missing and Murdered Native women

  • Commission a report on the pipeline culture as an intrinsic factor in the Missing and Murdered Indigenous Women crisis of and mandate oil companies fund resources for crisis prevention

  • Improve state-federal-tribal relations to avoid bias and discriminatory policing through law enforcement cross-cultural education with Tribal Nations

  • Expand funding of Urban Indian health organizations to enable them to address the health needs of Native Americans in urban areas who may not have access to Tribal health facilities

  • Fund Indian Health Service's (IHS) trust responsibility for Urban Indians so IHS funds can never be taken from the Federally Recognized Tribal allotment to fund Urban Indian Healthcare

  • Address the disproportionately high rates of homelessness among Urban Indians

  • Halt gentrification in Tribal and poor communities that prices people out of their communities

  • Help States develop and fund Urban Indian Liaison Offices to improve community relations