Aberle, David Friend, 1918-. Navajo economic development

Table of Contents

Publication Information

Paragraph Subjects (OCM)

Publication Information The main body of the Publication Information page contains all the metadata that HRAF holds for that document.

Author: Author's name as listed in Library of Congress records

Title: Navajo economic development

Published in: if part or section of a book or monograph Handbook of North American Indians. Southwest. Vol. 10, edited by Alfonso Ortiz

Published By: Original publisher Handbook of North American Indians. Southwest. Vol. 10, edited by Alfonso Ortiz Washington, D. C.: Smithsonian Institution : For sale by the Supt. of Docs., U.S. G.P.O.. 1983. 641-658 p.

By line: Author's name as appearing in the actual publication David F. Aberle

HRAF Publication Information: New Haven, Conn.: Human Relations Area Files, 2004. Computer File

Culture: Culture name from the Outline of World Cultures (OWC) with the alphanumberic OWC identifier in parenthesis. Navajo (NT13)

Subjects: Document-level OCM identifiers given by the anthropology subject indexers at HRAF Culture summary (105); Economic planning and development (179);

Abstract: Brief abstract written by HRAF anthropologists who have done the subject indexing for the document This chapter covers a broad range of topics on Navajo economic development and planning. Beginning with an historical overview, the author (an ethnologist) then moves to more detailed discussions of current problems, including energy resource development, the role of the BIA, and tribal enterprises. From a theoretical perspective, the source focuses on the reasons for economic underdevelopment, largely blaming big corporations and the BIA plus state governments, and assesses prospects for the future. The author is decidedly pro-Navajo seeing internal problems almost exclusively from the perspective of outside causes.

Document Number: HRAF's in-house numbering system derived from the processing order of documents 209

Document ID: HRAF's unique document identifier. The first part is the OWC identifier and the second part is the document number in three digits. nt13-209

Document Type: May include journal articles, essays, collections of essays, monographs or chapters/parts of monographs. Essay

Language: Language that the document is written in English

Note: For bibliographical references see 197: Brugge (p. 780-839)

Field Date: The date the researcher conducted the fieldwork or archival research that produced the document no date

Evaluation: In this alphanumeric code, the first part designates the type of person writing the document, e.g. Ethnographer, Missionary, Archaeologist, Folklorist, Linguist, Indigene, and so on. The second part is a ranking done by HRAF anthropologists based on the strength of the source material on a scale of 1 to 5, as follows: 1 - poor; 2 - fair; 3 - good, useful data, but not uniformly excellent; 4 - excellent secondary data; 5 - excellent primary data Ethnologist-5

Analyst: The HRAF anthropologist who subject indexed the document and prepared other materials for the eHRAF culture/tradition collection. Richard A. Wagner ; John Beierle ; 1985

Coverage Date: The date or dates that the information in the document pertains to (often not the same as the field date). 1933-1975

Coverage Place: Location of the research culture or tradition (often a smaller unit such as a band, community, or archaeological site) Navajo Reservation, southwestern United States

LCSH: Library of Congress Subject Headings Navajo Indians

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