Padden Guy Murphy (A&S 2009) is Discourse’s founding editor and an IGL Synaptic Scholar majoring in International Relations and Chinese. He also co-founded the civil-military relations initiative ALLIES (Alliance Linking Leaders in Education and the Services), and is a member of Tufts University’s improvisational comedy troupe Cheap Sox. His home and family are in Great Falls, Montana.
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This photo essay offers a glimpse into two of the seven American Indian reservations in Montana. The Blackfeet and the Chippewa Cree Nations, while very different, continue to fight to preserve their cultures in the face of modernity and societal crises. These nations exist as states within a state, answering to federal authority while maintaining partial national sovereignty. Governance and accountability are often lost to legal ambiguities and exploitation.
Both reservations struggle with tribal and federal governmental issues, drug and alcohol abuse, and pervasive poverty. The populations of the Blackfeet and Rocky Boy reservations are approximately 10,000 and 3,000, respectively.
BROWNING, MONTANA. BROWNING, the main city on the blackfeet reservation, was named after Daniel M. Browning, Commissioner of Indian Affairs under the War Department.
Garments dry outside Browning's city jail. Blackfeet citizens still suffer from lawlessness under Bureau of Indian Affairs jurisdiction. Recently, a teenage meth user stabbed neighbors without provocation and walked free for seven months until he attacked and killed an 18-year-old high school basketball star.