[American Indian economic development]
As stated in the thesis project, "The American Indian Community House (AICH) is a multi-purpose service organization which was established in 1969. Since that time, it has been the primary human service agency in New York City with Native Americans. It is the only agency in the City which is st...
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1983
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ftsnhuniv:oai:academicarchive.snhu.edu:10474/268 2023-09-05T13:19:14+02:00 [American Indian economic development] Hunt, Sharon Swack, Michael 1983 476053 bytes 6841635 bytes 1938960 bytes PDF application/pdf https://hdl.handle.net/10474/268 en_US eng Southern New Hampshire University Adobe Acrobat Reader https://hdl.handle.net/10474/268 Author retains all ownership rights. Further reproduction in violation of copyright is prohibited Original format: Bound CED Project Report, Shapiro Library, Southern New Hampshire University Southern New Hampshire University -- Theses (Community Economic Development) Native Americans human services public health substance abuse New York (NY) New York (US) Thesis 1983 ftsnhuniv 2023-08-14T17:59:22Z As stated in the thesis project, "The American Indian Community House (AICH) is a multi-purpose service organization which was established in 1969. Since that time, it has been the primary human service agency in New York City with Native Americans. It is the only agency in the City which is staffed and controlled entirely by Native Americans. Although New York City is not known for having a large Native American Indian population, according to the 1980 census, there are 11,500 Indian residents. While it is generally agreed that Indians are drastically undercounted in any urban census, it is useful to compare this figure to other cities in states which have a substantial Native American population. For instance, according to the same census, there are approximately 9,000 Indians and Eskimos in Anchorage, Alaska; 7,300 Native Americans in Albuquerque, New Mexico: 10,400 in Oklahoma City, Oklahoma and nearly 11,000 in Phoenix, Arizona. In this context, the American Indian residents in New York represent a relatively large urban Indian population. Since its inception the Community House has developed a wide range of services to meet the needs of its constituency. It was formerly the prime sponsor for Indian CETA (Comprehensive Employment and Training Act) and is now the prime sponsor for the Jobs Training and Partnership Act for Native Americans in the New York City metropolitan area. It also operates a federally funded Indian Health Program which provides limited primary medical care and referral services for medical and dental services; health education; limited treatment; and community outreach services to Indian clients. Four years ago, the Substance Abuse Program was established through funding by the New York State Division of Substance Abuse. The Program provides both information and referral services for individuals and their families and training resources for agencies which provide treatment for Indians. More recently, the Community House has established a Social Services Program to provide emergency food ... Thesis eskimo* Alaska Southern New Hampshire University: SNHU Academic Archive Anchorage Indian |
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Southern New Hampshire University: SNHU Academic Archive |
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English |
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Southern New Hampshire University -- Theses (Community Economic Development) Native Americans human services public health substance abuse New York (NY) New York (US) |
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Southern New Hampshire University -- Theses (Community Economic Development) Native Americans human services public health substance abuse New York (NY) New York (US) Hunt, Sharon [American Indian economic development] |
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Southern New Hampshire University -- Theses (Community Economic Development) Native Americans human services public health substance abuse New York (NY) New York (US) |
description |
As stated in the thesis project, "The American Indian Community House (AICH) is a multi-purpose service organization which was established in 1969. Since that time, it has been the primary human service agency in New York City with Native Americans. It is the only agency in the City which is staffed and controlled entirely by Native Americans. Although New York City is not known for having a large Native American Indian population, according to the 1980 census, there are 11,500 Indian residents. While it is generally agreed that Indians are drastically undercounted in any urban census, it is useful to compare this figure to other cities in states which have a substantial Native American population. For instance, according to the same census, there are approximately 9,000 Indians and Eskimos in Anchorage, Alaska; 7,300 Native Americans in Albuquerque, New Mexico: 10,400 in Oklahoma City, Oklahoma and nearly 11,000 in Phoenix, Arizona. In this context, the American Indian residents in New York represent a relatively large urban Indian population. Since its inception the Community House has developed a wide range of services to meet the needs of its constituency. It was formerly the prime sponsor for Indian CETA (Comprehensive Employment and Training Act) and is now the prime sponsor for the Jobs Training and Partnership Act for Native Americans in the New York City metropolitan area. It also operates a federally funded Indian Health Program which provides limited primary medical care and referral services for medical and dental services; health education; limited treatment; and community outreach services to Indian clients. Four years ago, the Substance Abuse Program was established through funding by the New York State Division of Substance Abuse. The Program provides both information and referral services for individuals and their families and training resources for agencies which provide treatment for Indians. More recently, the Community House has established a Social Services Program to provide emergency food ... |
author2 |
Swack, Michael |
format |
Thesis |
author |
Hunt, Sharon |
author_facet |
Hunt, Sharon |
author_sort |
Hunt, Sharon |
title |
[American Indian economic development] |
title_short |
[American Indian economic development] |
title_full |
[American Indian economic development] |
title_fullStr |
[American Indian economic development] |
title_full_unstemmed |
[American Indian economic development] |
title_sort |
[american indian economic development] |
publisher |
Southern New Hampshire University |
publishDate |
1983 |
url |
https://hdl.handle.net/10474/268 |
geographic |
Anchorage Indian |
geographic_facet |
Anchorage Indian |
genre |
eskimo* Alaska |
genre_facet |
eskimo* Alaska |
op_source |
Original format: Bound CED Project Report, Shapiro Library, Southern New Hampshire University |
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Adobe Acrobat Reader https://hdl.handle.net/10474/268 |
op_rights |
Author retains all ownership rights. Further reproduction in violation of copyright is prohibited |
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1776200052617773056 |