It is not common to find a settlement of Native Americans in one location such as the old homesteads or huts but these groups are majorly settled in towns and have integrated with other groups. However, there are some reservations which have full blood individuals. Many of these or the largest Native American group lives in Alaska with a total population of 104,871 which represents 14.8% of all native Americans in the US. The largest of these groups are the …show more content…
However, according to the U.S. Bureau of the Census (2000), number of the Cherokee Indians in America stood at 729,533.
There are strenuous steps that are required to be taken before becoming a tribal member. The process starts with genealogical research when one does not have any living relatives or family information or documents to lay a claim. The information provided should have birth, marriage or death dates of the kin and places they lived. That information should clearly illustrate that the relatives were of Indian origin where after they are cross checked in the tribal rolls or tribal census. There are cases of freedman which are still in courts but there is no blood quantum required for membership.
The tribal governments are headed by tribal chiefs who ruled by consensus meaning that they have to agree with tribesmen to enforce policies though they remain most vocal in the tribe. Though there is no record of native Indian women in America being tribal chiefs. In the tribal governments elders form the government which is male