From the moment Native Americans and Autonomous Europe emerged from North America's organized Europe, negotiations were a central feature of the relationship between indigenous peoples and new immigrants. This feature has already been revealed in the development of the treaty over 30 years in Canada and continues to be the day when modern treaties, assertions and agreements negotiate with Canadian indigenous people, Inuit and Metis. . 1 One of the central challenges of negotiations over the past 30 years is the issue of indigenous autonomy, which is ranked second in negotiations on comprehensive land request without field.
Today, important issues such as tribal sovereignty, treaty rights, tribal jurisdiction, gambling law, tribal taxation, etc. are resolved in the national courts, the US Congress and the Legislature. Prior to the Constitution, the Indigenous People's Autonomous Government of America was approved by the Constitution and many treaties between the American and American indigenous tribes. Native Americans' technology, economics, language, and political systems are as diverse as those in Europe. Prior to European contacts, the history of Native American was as colorful and exciting as the rest of the world. For these reasons, it is impossible to identify the "indigenous culture of the Americas".
Before European people arrived on the continent, Indian tribes (American Indians and Alaska Natives) were independent for centuries, and they still exercised the power of the sovereign government. The Supreme Court, an Indian tribe, discussed the unique rights of the Moorish sovereignty in the 1987 Worcester v. Georgia incident. Worcester's question is whether Georgia can impose a law on the Cherokee Indian Settlement within the state. The court stated that Georgia State can not expand its law within the scope of reservation and said:
In June 1830, the Cherokee delegation headed by Ross Prime Minister Ross expressed dissatisfaction with the tribal sovereignty of the state government at the Supreme Court of Cherokee National v. Georgia. In Worcester Georgia cases in Georgia, the US Supreme Court ruled that Cherokee Native Americans have the right to federal protection and are not subject to state lawsuits. Worcester v. Georgia is considered one of the most important decisions in Native American law. Worcester v. Although Georgia was backing up, most Cherokee settled emigrated to Indian territory from 1838 to 1839. This crying place happened during the Indian expulsion law in 1830. The harsh treatment Cherokee had over the hands of white settlers brought in the entry of some people to the west.