In 1924, Congress had proposed the idea of the Meriam Survey whose purpose was to examine and evaluate the conditions of the provided reservations. When the tests resulted in pointing out the terrible conditions of the reservations and the dangers of forced assimilation issued by the Dawes General Allotment Act of 1887, the idea of reform quickly brewed into a larger movement. This was largely a part of President Franklin D. Roosevelt's movement of the New Deal with the hope of extending its public works program and conservation measures to the Native American people as well as all American residents. during the difficult time of the Great Depression. Survival became much more of a possibility with these new measures taken by the government, and in 1934, the Indian reorganization Act was officially released, giving Native Americans the provisions of protection of tribal lands from possible speculators and more acreage to expand their living conditions. There was further funding to resolve financial issues and public health programs to provide medical assistance services to the Native American people. After almost arriving at the brink of extinction, over 160 tribes had been granted the ability to craft their own constitutions and the option of managing their own tribal affairs with such a document.
In sum, the Indian Reorganization was a large stepping stone toward the improvement of Native American and American relations together. It allowed for the harsh assimilation plan of the Dawes General Allotment Act to be reversed, and the Great Depression as well as the current harsh conditions of the reservations to be reduced substantially. However, this was not the end to naive cruelty, as during the 1930s until the time of about the 1970s, Native Americans were portrayed in popular culture as savages, as demonstrated by companies like Disney and movies like Custer of the West. Unpopular stereotypes, attempts at indoctrination by the new reservation schoolteachers provided by the reorganization act, and the derogatory names were still plaguing the tribes. Although conditions improved for most of these Native Americans, to what extend did their life conditions actually improve?
Resources:
http://www.nebraskastudies.org/0700/frameset_reset.html?http://www.nebraskastudies.org/0700/stories/0701_0142.html
https://www.britannica.com/topic/Indian-Reorganization-Act
http://www.ndstudies.org/resources/IndianStudies/standingrock/historical_reorganization.html
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