- Journal of American Studies Turkey
- Issue:54
- Building Native Women’s Leadership through Community and Culture
Building Native Women’s Leadership through Community and Culture
Authors : Nichole S. PRESCOTT
Pages : 79-104
View : 7 | Download : 7
Publication Date : 2020-11-01
Article Type : Research Paper
Abstract :Using the lenses of colonialism and gender, this article explores the evolving nature and perception of Native American women’s leadership historically and in the present. Historically, women and men had different yet equally important leadership roles to play within the community. These roles were inextricably interdependent. Euro-American colonialism through conquest and religion brought concomitant gender ideologies that slowly tore at the fabric of indigenous communities and ultimately altered the nature of gender parity within community leadership. Today, Native American women are taking back a degree of the significant sociopolitical power they once exercised. Native women are rising to the top ranks of leadership in the nation as members of the US House of Representatives, in their states as executive officers and as state representatives in their state legislatures, as well as in their communities as tribal officials, education advocates, environmental activists, and as culturally empowered mothers, sisters, and daughters.Keywords : Native American Women, Indigenous Womens Leadership, Indigenous Culture, Indigenous Community