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Indians
Find Indian gaming


Indian gaming

In 1987 the U.S. Supreme Court recognized that, as sovereign political entities, federally-recognised Native American tribal entities could operate gaming facilities free of state regulation. Congress soon enacted the 1988 Indian Gaming Regulatory Act, which sets the terms for how Native American tribal entities are permitted to operate casinos and bingo parlours. Tribal entities such as the Mashantucket Pequots in Connecticut near large cities have been particularly successful. Generally, a tribal entity is permitted to operate gaming facilities if anyone in the state is permitted to.

When the law came into effect there was hope that tribally-operated casinos would provide a source of much needed income to Native American communities and serve as a basis for ongoing reservation economic development. Many tribal governments have seen substantial improvements in their ability to provide public services to their members, building schools, making infrastructural improvements, and shoring up the loss of native traditions. Tribal gaming operations have not been without controversy, however. A small number of tribes have been able to distribute large per-capita payments, generating considerable public attention. Some observers allege that businessmen have frequently established joint ventures with tribes on terms that de facto amount to just buying a tribe's name for their own business, terms which have left meager funding for Native Americans. Others describe examples of small groups of people with dubious Native American heritage who have been able to gain federal recognition for the sole purpose of establishing a tax-exempt casino. In addition, the presence of gambling establishments on reservations has, perhaps not surprisingly, led to an increase in the rate of compulsive gambling on many reservations. Finally, some Native Americans do not like the firm link between Natives and a dubious or even sinful business (as gambling is considered by many people) that has thus entered the minds of the majority society.

External links

Further reading

  • Brett Duval Fromson, Hitting the Jackpot: The Inside Story of the Richest Indian Tribe in History, Atlantic Monthly Press, September, 2003, hardcover, 320 pages, ISBN 0871139049; hardcover, Gale Group, February, 2004, hardcover, 366 pages, ISBN 0786262117
  • University of Connecticut report on the positive impacts the Mashantucket Tribal Nation and its Foxwoods Casino have had on the surrounding areas and the State of Connecticut: [1]


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