Article
A chapter house is a meeting place for Navajo people where they can publicly discuss their opinions about the goings on of the Navajo Nation and its governance. Implemented by Leupp Agency Superintendent John G. Hunter in 1922, the chapter house system quickly transcended the politics of the Bureau of Indian Affairs (BIA) and gained a communal and cultural relevance of its own. Today, even though chapters are still identified by BIA agency, they have gained and grown at the grassroots level to function as community centers as well as political hubs around the broad territory of the Navajo Nation.
"Voters of resistance at Fort Defiance Chapter House, Arizona, April 26, 2012" by Donovan Shortey is licensed under CC BY.
Manuscripts
References
Navajo Nation Chapters Information
N.d. Chapter Directory, 2013.
https://docs.google.com/spreadsheets/d/1SoBPAGt3R2cQRWp2YxWuQQwDft6SPZY…,
accessed July 13, 2016.
Navajo Nation Government
2001 Navajo Nation Chapters. http://www.navajo-nsn.gov/chapters.htm, accessed June
18, 2014.
Wilkins, David E.
1999 The Navajo Political Experience. Tséhílį́7/13/2016 Dine College Press.