“This research is timely and significant not only for scholarship on Indigenous peoples and the state but also for contemporary political battles over Indigenous sovereignty. Wardship and the Welfare State addresses matters of critical importance to our current political discourse on poverty, the state, and citizenship broadly, and it makes a substantial contribution to two historiographies: Indigenous and policy studies. This book is also imminently readable.”—Katherine M. B. Osburn, author of Choctaw Resurgence in Mississippi: Race, Class, and Nation Building in the Jim Crow South, 1830–1977
“Mary Klann impressively covers a range of policy and legal decisions across the United States, furthering our understanding of how settler-colonial ideologies defined political and legal decisions in the mid- to late twentieth century. Wardship and the Welfare State is a unique contribution to the historiography of Native American policy and a fabulous piece of scholarship.”—Kyle E. Ciani, author of Choosing to Care: A Century of Childcare and Social Reform in San Diego, 1850–1950
“In clear and vivid prose, Wardship and the Welfare State shows how Native people navigated complex legal and bureaucratic systems that governed access to resources in the twentieth-century United States. . . . Anchored in stories of Native peoples’ understandings of wardship and welfare, Mary Klann expands our understanding of care—who has access to it, who deserves it, how people fight for it, and how it is always politically charged.”—Jessica Wilkerson, author of To Live Here, You Have to Fight: How Women Led Appalachian Movements for Social Justice