Breaking the Iron Bonds
Indian Control of Energy Development
Marjane Ambler
November 2000
xvi, 352 pages, 28 photographs, 2 maps, 6 x 9
Development of Western Resources
Paper ISBN 978-0-7006-0518-7, $19.95
Indian people own a good portion
of the country's western coal and uranium resources, as well
as vast quantities of oil and natural gas. In the early 1960s,
lurid news accounts about the Black Mesa strip mine in Arizona
and the manipulation of the Navajos and Hopis shocked the American
public, Indian and non-Indian alike. The mine became a symbol
of the exploitation of Indian people and Indian resources to
satisfy the nation's energy demands. In this book, Marjane Ambler
explores the strides that both tribes and individual Indian mineral
owners have made since that time, gaining crucial control over
oil, gas, coal, and uranium development on their lands.
Breaking the Iron Bonds focuses on the quiet revolution
of the 1970s and 1980s. It traces the steps taken--both forward
and backward--as tribes and individual Indian mineral owners
asserted control over energy development, from monetary returns
and water rights to off-reservation development and environmental
regulations. In a final chapter, the author describes how some
tribes have taken over some wells completely or joined with corporate
partners to direct development. Ambler, who covered these issues
as a journalist, offers firsthand accounts, numerous interviews
with major players, and lively descriptions of the heroics of
some Indian leaders.
Much of the writing about American Indian issues has focused
on either policies adopted by federal government or on the results
of those policies on a single reservation. By contrast, this
book shows the effects of tribal and federal energy policies
on fifteen western reservations and untangles the complicated
legal and technical issues.
"An exhaustive and seminal study of a pivotal epoch in
contemporary Indian history. Skillfully, Ambler describes patterns
of corporate exploitation, BIA indifference, fickle federal policies,
perennial congressional investigations, and development of energy
resources for tribes. This book will endure as a major reference
on the legal evolution of tribal control over natural resources."--Western
Historical Quarterly
"An important addition to the growing literature on Indian
self-rule."--Montana, the Magazine of Western History
"A lucid and informative account of the struggle for
effective control of tribally held energy resources-oil and gas,
coal, and uranium--in the mountain west of the United States.
. . and a telling interpretation of ethnic conflict within the
national economy during the past three decades."--The
Chronicles of Oklahoma
"A balanced perspective and brilliant synthesis of issues,
personalities, and events. . . . Superlative history."--Michael
Lawson, author of Dammed Indians: The Pick-Sloan Plan
and the Missouri River Sioux
"A well-researched, readable, and comprehensive overview."--Journal
of American History
"Provocative and rich. . . . An original commentary on
tribal energy resource management-and a basic primer for public
historians on native-American issues and their significance in
the twentieth century."--The Public Historian
"Ambler is a fair and impressively lucid observer of
contemporary Indian affairs. She understands the real and potential
impacts of energy development on tribal cultures and reservation
life, and she is outstandingly knowledgeable about Indian backgrounds."--Alvin
M. Josephy, Jr., author of Now That the Buffalo's Gone
"Ambler is one of the few non-Indian writers writing
about Indians who is able to do so without being maudlin, charitable
or condescending. She writes straight from the heart."--Tim
Giago, publisher of the Lakota Times
"This is an important and useful study that suggests
optimism concerning Native Americans' future."--Choice
MARJANE AMBLER has received grants and awards from
the Alicia Patterson Foundation, the Native American Press Association,
and the Fund for Investigative Journalism. Her work has also
been recognized by the Wyoming Council for the Humanities.
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