Chapter house (Navajo Nation)
This article is about the Navajo administrative meeting place. For the term applied in church architecture, see Chapter house.
A Chapter house (Navajo: Áłah nidaʼadleeh dah bighan) is an administrative, communal meeting place on the territory of the Navajo Nation where residents have a forum to express their opinions to their Navajo Nation Council Delegate or to decide on matters concerning their chapter.[1] As of January 2004, there were a total of 110 such meeting places in existence.[2] However, the input given to the delegates during such meetings is not legally binding.
John G. Hunter, superintendent of the Leupp Agency, is generally given credit for the establishment of the Chapter system starting in 1922 in an effort to bolster Navajo self-determination and local governance.[3]
References
- ↑ Black Mesa (Kits'iili) Chapter. Accessed 2009-12-27./
- ↑ www.lapahie.com Archived January 7, 2010, at the Wayback Machine.. Accessed 2009-12-27.
- ↑ Wilkins, David E. The Navajo Political Experience. Dine College Press. Tsaile/Tséhílį́, AZ:1999.
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