The Alaska Native Claims Settlement Act (ANCSA) was signed into law by President Richard Nixon on December 18, 1971, constituting at the time the largest land claims settlement in United States history.
ANCSA was intended to resolve long-standing issues surrounding aboriginal land claims in Alaska, as well as to stimulate economic development throughout Alaska."
Recognition of aboriginal land rights in Alaska was a sharp departure from American Indian policy in other parts of the US.
Observers believe this was more a result of slow economic development within Alaska than rejection of Indian policy," citing Cooley, R.A. 1983.
"Evolution of Alaska land policy." in Morehouse, T. A. (editor).
Alaskan Resources Development: Issues of the 1980s.
Boulder: Westview Press, pp.
13-49.
The settlement established Alaska Native claims to the land by transferring titles to twelve Alaska Native regional corporations and over 200 local village corporations.
A thirteenth regional corporation was later created for Alaska Natives who no longer resided in Alaska.
The act is codified as 43 U.S.C. 1601 et seq.
Background
thumb|160px|Cliff Groh was one of a number of non-Native lawyers who assisted various Native organizations and AFN's president Emil Notti in achieving passage of ANCSA.
When Alaska became a state in 1959, section 4 of the Alaska Statehood Act provided that any existing Alaska Native land claims would be unaffected by statehood and held in status quo.
Yet while section 4 of the act preserved Native land claims until later settlement, section 6 allowed for the state government to claim lands deemed vacant.
Section 6 granted the state of Alaska the right to select lands then in the hands of the federal government, with the exception of Native territory.
As a result, nearly  from the public domain would eventually be transferred to the state.
The state government also attempted to acquire lands under section 6 of the Statehood Act that were subject to Native claims under section 4, and that were currently occupied and used by Alaska Natives.
The federal Bureau of Land Management began to process the Alaska government's selections without taking into account the Native claims and without informing the affected Native groups.
It was against this backdrop that the original language for a land claims settlement was developed.
A 9.2-magnitude earthquake struck the state in 1964.
Recovery efforts drew the attention of the federal government The Federal Field Committee for Development Planning in Alaska decided that Natives should receive $100 million and 10% of revenue as a royalty.
Nothing was done with this proposal, however, and a freeze on land transfers remained in effect.
In 1966, Emil Notti called for a statewide meeting inviting numerous leaders around Alaska to gather and create the first meeting of a committee.
The historic meeting was held October 18, 1966 - on the 99th anniversary of the transfer of Alaska from Russia.
Notti presided over the three-day conference as it discussed matters of land recommendations, claims committee's, and political challenges the act would have getting through congress.
Many respected politicians and businessmen attended the meeting and delegates were astonished at the attention which they received from well-known political figures of the state.
The growing presence and political importance of Natives was evidenced when association leaders were elected to the legislature.
Members of the associated gathered and were able to gain seven of the sixty seats in the legislature.
When the group met a second time early in 1967, it emerged with a new name, The Alaska Federation of Natives, and a new full-time President, Emil Notti.
AFN changed the human rights and economic stability of the Alaska Native population forever.Emil Notti
In 1968, Governor Walter Hickel summoned a group of Native leaders to work out a settlement that would be satisfactory to Natives.
The group met for ten days and asked for $20 million in exchange for requested lands.
They also asked for 10% of federal mineral lease revenue.
In 1969, President Nixon appointed Hickel as Secretary of the Interior.
The Alaska Federation of Natives (AFN) protested against Hickel's nomination, but he was eventually confirmed.
Hickel worked with the AFN, negotiating with Native leaders and state government over the disputed lands.
Offers went back and forth, with each rejecting the other's proposals.
The AFN wanted rights to land, while then-Governor Keith Miller believed Natives did not have legitimate claims to state land in light of the provisions of the Alaska Statehood Act.
But a succeeding Alaska state administration under Governor William A. Egan would stake out positions upon which the AFN and other stakeholders could largely agree.
Native leaders, in addition to Alaska's congressional delegation and the state's newly elected Governor William A. Egan, eventually reached the basis for presenting an agreement to Congress.
The proposed settlement terms faced challenges in both houses but found a strong ally in Senator Henry M. Jackson from Washington state.
The most controversial issues that continued to hold up approval were methods for determining land selection by Alaska Natives and financial distribution.
In 1968, the Atlantic-Richfield Company discovered oil at Prudhoe Bay on the Arctic coast, catapulting the issue of land ownership into headlines.
In order to lessen the difficulty of drilling at such a remote location and transporting the oil to the lower 48 states, the oil companies proposed building a pipeline to carry the oil across Alaska to the port of Valdez At Valdez, the oil would be loaded onto tankers and shipped to the contiguous states.
The plan had been approved, but a permit to construct the pipeline, which would cross lands involved in the land claims dispute, could not be granted until the Native claims were settled.
With major petroleum dollars on the line, pressure mounted to achieve a definitive legislative resolution at the federal level.
In 1971, the Alaska Native Claims Settlement Act was signed into law by President Nixon.
It abrogated Native claims to aboriginal lands except those that are the subject of the law.
In return, Natives retained up to  of land and were paid $963 million.
The land and money were to be divided among regional, urban, and village tribal corporations established under the law, often recognizing existing leadership.
Effect of land conveyances
In 1971, barely one million acres of land in Alaska were in private hands.
ANCSA, together with section 6 of Alaska Statehood Act, which the new act allowed to come to fruition, affected ownership to about  of land in Alaska once wholly controlled by the federal government.
That is larger by  than the combined areas of Maine, Vermont, New Hampshire, Massachusetts, Rhode Island, Connecticut, New York, New Jersey, Pennsylvania, Delaware, Maryland and Virginia.
When the bill passed in 1971, it included provisions that had never before been attempted in previous United States settlements with Native Americans.
The newly passed Alaska Native Claims Settlement Act created twelve Native regional economic development corporations.
Each corporation was associated with a specific region of Alaska and the Natives who had traditionally lived there.
This innovative approach to native settlements engaged the tribes in corporate capitalism.
The idea originated with the AFN, who believed that the Natives would have to become a part of the capitalist system in order to survive.
As stockholders in these corporations, the Natives could earn some income and stay in their traditional villages.
If the corporations were managed properly, they could make profits that would enable individuals to stay, rather than having to leave Native villages to find better work.
This was intended to help preserve Native culture.
Native and state land selection
Alaska Natives had three years from passage of ANCSA to make land selections of the  granted under the act.
In some cases Native corporations received outside aid in surveying the land.
For instance, Doyon, Limited (one of the 13 regional corporations) was helped by the Geophysical Institute of the University of Alaska.
The Institute determined which land contained resources such as minerals and coal.
NASA similarly provided satellite imagery to aid in Native corporations finding areas most suited for vegetation and their traditional subsistence culture.
The imagery showed locations of caribou and moose, as well as forests with marketable timber.
In total about  were analyzed for Doyon.
Natives were able to choose tens of thousands of acres of land rich with timber while Doyon used mineral analysis to attract businesses.
The state of Alaska to date has been granted approximately 85% or  of the land claims it has made under ANCSA.
The state is entitled to a total of  under the terms of the Statehood Act.
Originally the state had 25 years after passage of the Alaska Statehood Act to file claims under section 6 of the act with the Bureau of Land Management (BLM).
Amendments to ANCSA extended that deadline until 1994, with the expectation that BLM would complete processing of land transfers subject to overlapping Native claims by 2009.
Nonetheless, some Native and state selections under ANCSA remained unresolved as late as December 2014.
Criticism of ANCSA
There was largely positive reaction to ANCSA, although not entirely.
The act was supported by Natives as well as non-Natives, and likewise enjoyed bipartisan support.
Natives were heavily involved in the legislative process, and the final draft of the act used many AFN ideas.
Some Natives have argued that ANCSA has hastened cultural genocide of Alaska Natives.
Some Natives critiqued ANCSA as an illegitimate treaty since only tribal leaders were involved and the provisions of the act were not voted on by indigenous populations.
One native described it as a social and political experiment.
Critics have also argued that Natives so feared massacre or incarceration that they offered no resistance to the act.
Others have argued that the settlement was arguably the most generous afforded by the United States to a Native group.
They note that some of the largest and most profitable corporations in the state are the twelve created by ANCSA.
Other critics attacked the act as "Native welfare" and such complaints continue to be expressed.
The corporation system has been critiqued, as in some cases stockholders have sold land to outside corporations that have leveled forests and extracted minerals.
But supporters of the system argue that it has provided economic benefits for indigenous peoples that outweigh these problems.
Selected provisions of ANCSA
Native claims in Alaska were extinguished by means of section 4 of ANCSA.
In exchange for abrogating Native claims, approximately one-ninth of the state's land plus $962.5 million were distributed to more than 200 local Alaska Native "village corporations" established under section 8, in addition to 12 land-owning for-profit Alaska Native "regional corporations" and a non-land-owning thirteenth corporation for Alaska Natives who had left the state established under section 6.
Of the compensation monies, $462.5 million was to come from the federal treasury and the rest from oil revenue-sharing.
Settlement benefits would accrue to those with at least one-fourth Native ancestry under sections 3(b) and 5(a).
Of the approximately 80,000 Natives enrolled under ANCSA, those living in villages (approximately two-thirds of the total) would receive 100 shares in both a village and a regional corporation.
The remaining one-third would be "at large" shareholders with 100 shares in a regional corporation with additional rights to revenue from regional mineral and timber resources.
The Alaska Native Allotment Act was revoked but with the proviso that pending claims under that act would continue to be processed under section 18.
Successful applicants would be excluded under ANCSA by section 14(h)(5) from land to be used for a primary residence.
The twelve regional corporations within the state would administer the settlement.
A thirteenth corporation composed of Natives who had left the state would receive compensation but not land.
Surface rights to  were patented to the Native village and regional corporations under sections 12(c), as well as 14(h)(1) and (8).
The surface rights to the patented land were granted to the village corporations and the subsurface right to the land were granted to the regional corporation, creating a split estate pursuant to section 14(f).
Alaska Native regional corporations
thumb|right|300px|Regional corporations established by the Alaska Native Claims Settlement Act.
The following thirteen regional corporations were created under ANCSA:
Ahtna, Incorporated
The Aleut Corporation
Arctic Slope Regional Corporation
Bering Straits Native Corporation
Bristol Bay Native Corporation
Calista Corporation
Chugach Alaska Corporation
Cook Inlet Region, Inc.
Doyon, Limited
Koniag, Incorporated
NANA Regional Corporation
Sealaska Corporation
The 13th Regional Corporation
Additionally, most regions and some villages have created their own nonprofits providing social services and health care through grant funding and federal compacts.
The objectives of these nonprofits are varied, but focus generally on cultural and educational activities.
These include scholarships for Native students, sponsorship of cultural and artistic events, preservation efforts for Native languages, and protection of sites with historic or religious importance.
Alaska Native village and urban corporations
ANCSA created about 224 village and urban corporations.
Below is a representative list of village and urban corporations created under ANCSA:
Ukpeaġvik Iñupiat Corporation, village corporation for Utqiaġvik
Bethel Native Corporation, village corporation for Bethel
Cape Fox Corporation, village corporation for Saxman
Deloycheet, Inc., village corporation for Holy Cross
Huna Totem Corporation, village corporation for Hoonah
Haida Corporation, village corporation for Hydaburg
Goldbelt, Inc., urban corporation for Juneau
Paug-Vik, Inc.
Ltd., village corporation for Naknek
Chenega Corporation, village corporation for Chenega
Afognak Native Corporation, village corporation for Afognak and Port Lions
Kavilco Incorporated, village corporation for Kasaan
Klukwan, Inc., village corporation for Klukwan
The Kuskokwim Corporation , village corporation for Aniak, Crooked Creek, Georgetown, Kalskag, Lower Kalskag, Napaimute, Red Devil, Russian Mission, Sleetmute and Stony River
Natives of Kodiak, Inc., urban corporation for Kodiak
Ounalashka Corporation, village corporation for Unalaska
Ouzinkie Native Corporation, village corporation for Ouzinkie
Shee Atika, Incorporated, urban corporation for Sitka
See also
Alaska National Interest Lands Conservation Act
Alaska Statehood Act
Alaska Native Allotment Act
Alaska Land Transfer Acceleration Act
Emil Notti
References
Bibliography
Borneman, Walter R. Alaska: Saga of a Bold Land.
Harper Perennial. (2004)
Dombrowski, Kirk.
Against Culture: Development, Politics, and Religion in Indian Alaska U of Nebraska Press. (2001)
Haycox, Stephen.
Alaska: An American Colony.
University of Washington Press. (2006)
Haycox, Stephen.
Frigid Embrace: Politics, Economics, and Environment in Alaska Oregon University Press. (2002)
Haynes, James B. "Land Selection and Development under the Alaska Native Claims Settlement Act," Arctic Institute of North America, Vol. 28–3, pp.
201–208 (September 1975)
Linxwiler, James D.
"The Alaska Native Claims Settlement Act: The First Twenty Years," Proceedings from the 38th Annual Rocky Mountain Mineral Law Institute. (1992)
Roderick, Libby.
Alaska Native Cultures and Issues: Responses to Frequently Asked Questions.
University of Alaska Press. (2010)
Williams, Maria Sháa Tláa.
The Alaska Native Reader: History, Culture, Politics.
Duke University Press.
(2009).
Worl, Rosita.
"Reconstructing Sovereignty in Alaska," Cultural Survival Quarterly. (Fall 2001)
Further reading
Arnold, Robert D. Alaska Native Land Claims, (Alaska Native Foundation 1978).
Berry, Mary Clay.
The Alaska Pipeline: The Politics of Oil and Native Land Claims, (Indiana University Press 1975).
Berger, Thomas R. Village Journey: The Report of the Alaska Native Review Commission, (Farrar, Straus and Giroux 1985).
Case, David S. Alaska Natives and American Laws, (University of Alaska Press 3d ed. 2012)
GAO Report: Increased Use of Alaska Native Corporations’ Special 8(a) Provisions Calls for Tailored Oversight (April 2006)
Kentch, Gavin.
"A Corporate Culture?
The Environmental Justice Challenges of the Alaska Native Claims Settlement Act".
81 Miss.
L.J. 813 (2012)
Lazarus, Arthur Jr.
"The Alaska Native Claims Settlement Act: A Flawed Victory," Law and Contemporary Problems. (Winter 1976)
London, J. Tate.
"The "1991 Amendments" to the Alaska Native Claims Settlement Act: Protection for Native Lands?", 8 Stan.
Envtl.
L.J. 200. (1989)
Mitchell, Donald Craig.
Sold American: The Story of Alaska Natives and Their Land, 1867-1959, (University of Alaska Press 2003).
Mitchell, Donald Craig.
Take My Land Take My Life: The Story of Congress's Historic Settlement of Alaska Native Land Claims, 1960-1971, (University of Alaska Press 2001).
Morgan, Lael.
Art and Eskimo Power: The Life and Times of Alaskan Howard Rock, (Epicenter Press 1988).
Senungetuk, Joseph E. Give or Take a Century: An Eskimo Chronicle, (The Indian Historian Press 1971).
"Settling the Alaska Native Claims Settlement Act", 38 Stan.
L. Rev. 227 (1985).
External links
The Alaska Native Claims Settlement Act Resource Center
Alaska Native Land Claims Settlement Act of 1971
Revisiting the Alaska Native Claims Settlement Act (ANCSA)
Alaska Native Corporation Links
