Alaska
Native rights and Indigenous sovereignty cannot be separated from the problem
of extreme oil and gas production in Alaska. Politicians and oil interests have
a long history of pushing legislation nullifying Alaska Native land claims,
especially those claims that stood in the way of oil and pipeline development.
After being declared a state in 1958, Alaska selected for
oil development tracts of land on the North Slope, in an area called Prudhoe
Bay. Without consultation and consent of the local Inupiat village, but with
approval of the U.S. Bureau of Land Management, these lands were transferred to
the state.