Paper genocide


Paper genocide is the systemic removal of a group of people from historical records, such as censuses, which gives the impression that that group has disappeared or become extinct. A 2023 article published by Cultural Survival defines the term as "intentional destruction of documents and records related to a particular group of people, usually with the intent of erasing their histories and cultures", while a 2019 article in National Geographic characterizes the term thusly: "Paper genocide means that a people can be made to disappear on paper". The term is often used to refer to government policies regarding Native Americans in the United States and the Indigenous peoples of the Caribbean, primarily the Taíno. According to Cultural Survival, paper genocide can lead to generational and historical trauma for the communities affected.

Examples

Taíno and Indigenous peoples of the Caribbean

A common example of a paper genocide is that of the Taíno, an Indigenous peoples of the Caribbean. Following the first voyage of Christopher Columbus in 1492, the Taíno population began to significantly decline in the ensuing years, primarily due to virgin soil epidemics and the enslavement and harsh treatment of the Taíno by Spanish colonizers in such labor-intensive fields as gold mining and the cultivation of sugarcane. Estimates for the Taíno population on the island of Hispaniola range from 60,000 to 8 million in 1492, with contemporary writer Bartolomé de las Casas claiming a population of around 3 million. However, by 1542, this number had declined to around 200. According to a 2019 article in National Geographic, shortly after a 1565 census that showed only 200 "Indians" living on Hispaniola, the Taíno were declared extinct. Similarly, on the island of Puerto Rico, where there were an estimated 1 million indigenous people in 1493, a 1787 census recorded only 2,300 non-mixed-race Indigenous people were recorded. In the next census conducted on Puerto Rico in 1802, no Indigenous people were recorded, and according to National Geographic, historical records after this point indicate that no Indigenous people remained in the Caribbean.
Despite the apparent elimination of Indigenous peoples from the Caribbean, several historians note that a paper genocide may have obscured the continued existence of groups such as the Taíno. A 2022 article in the Brown Political Review notes that, in Puerto Rico, Spanish Catholic priests, who were responsible for birth registry, may have been inclined to classify people with some Taíno ancestry as "mestizo" or "mulatto", in part to diminish the representation of Taíno people on the island. A 2019 article in National Geographic also notes possible undercounting of Taíno people due to the classification of people born to Spanish fathers and Taíno mothers. That same article also mentions that, following the abolition of legal slavery of Indigenous peoples of the Americas by the Spanish monarchy in 1533, many slaveholders in the Caribbean may have been inclined to simply reclassify their enslaved people as African rather than grant them their manumission. Additionally, according to the magazine, many censuses in Latin America did not provide an option for Indigenous peoples, instead requiring respondents to identify as either "Hispanic", "white", "black", or mixed-race. In Puerto Rico, this practice continued after the United States gained control of the island.
In the early 1990s, descendants of Indigenous peoples of the Caribbean began a revival of Indigenous cultures and language, including participating in powwows and other festivals, and openly refuted the historical narrative that Indigenous peoples in the region had been eliminated. In the 2010s, genetic research, including the construction of the genome of a Taíno person who had lived between the 8th and 10th century, found that a significant population of the current Caribbean population have traces of DNA from Indigenous peoples. In 2016, 164 Puerto Ricans were tested and all were found to have traces matching the Taíno DNA. That same year, a National Geographic study indicated that 61 percent of Puerto Ricans have Indigenous mitochondrial DNA. Jorge Estevez, a Taíno activist, said of the results, "It shows that the true story is one of assimilation, certainly, but not total extinction".
In 2020, after options for identifying as "Indian or indigenous" were added to the United States census for Puerto Rico, over 92,000 Puerto Ricans identified as such. Additionally, as of the 2020s, several Taíno advocacy groups exist, such as the United Confederation of Taíno People, the Taíno Jatibonícu Tribe of Boriken, and the Taíno Nation of the Antilles.

Native Americans in the United States

In a 2020 blog for the Law School Survey for Student Engagement at Indiana University, Vickie Sutton, a law professor at Texas Tech University and member of the Lumbee Tribe of North Carolina, described the "policies of first Great Britain and then the United States against the indigenous population in America" as "genocidal", both physically and in paper form. Regarding the latter, Sutton states that both nations " references to Native Americans in property records, census records, birth and death records in a paper genocidal policy".

Difficulties in gaining federal recognition

The paper genocide of Native American tribes can have an impact on gaining federal recognition, an important aspect of tribal sovereignty in the United States. For example, in the state of Rhode Island, the Narragansett people spent several centuries attempting to gain federal recognition, which was granted in 1983. Starting in the late 18th century, government officials in the state began to record Narragansett people as "black", "colored", or "negro" on official documents, a practice that was upheld in the 1793 Rhode Island Supreme Court case Aldrich v. Hammer. This was part of an effort by the state to do away with Indigenous identity and force cultural assimilation onto the Narragansett. In a similar case, the Mashpee Wampanoag Tribe of Massachusetts began seeking federal recognition in the 1970s, but their efforts were hurt due to inconsistent data from the United States Census Bureau. It wasn't until 2007 that the tribe became federally recognized.
In 2009, the Supreme Court of the United States ruled in Carcieri v. Salazar that the federal government could only hold land in trust for tribes that were federally recognized in 1934, when the Indian Reorganization Act was passed. Critics have stated that the ruling could have negative consequences on tribes that have gained recognition since then, in some cases because of a lack of adequate historical documentation.

Blood quantum laws

Blood quantum is a system of measuring Native American ancestry based on the ancestry of an individual's parents, such that, for example, a child who is the offspring of a father with a Native American blood quantum level of one-fourth and a mother whose level is one-half would have a blood quantum level of three-eighths. The system is used by some tribes to determine eligibility for membership, and related concepts have appeared in several treaties between the federal government and tribes, such as in the 1825 Osage Treaty with the Osage Nation. The system was further codified by the federal government in acts such as the 1887 Dawes Act and the 1934 Indian Reorganization Act. Blood quantum levels for Native Americans can be recorded by the Bureau of Indian Affairs, who issue Certificates of Degree of Indian Blood to individuals that are used in tribal recognition.
Regarding the concept, Jill Doerfler, the head of the University of Michigan's American Indian and Indigenous Studies Department, said in 2021, "What blood quantum does is racialize American Indian identity. It is an outside concept used to disenfranchise Native people and tribes from their legal and political status. And it's the best way to eliminate ongoing treaty obligations". In an article for Voice of America's website entitled "Some Native Americans Fear Blood Quantum is Formula for 'Paper Genocide' " Doerfler further elaborated that the system could be used by the federal government to deprive tribes of land and recognition in what she termed a "paper genocide".

United States censuses

Starting with the first federal census in 1790, Indigenous people were not often recorded. Between 1790 and 1850, Native Americans were largely excluded from the survey, with a major exception occurring in the 1850 census, when Puebloans in the New Mexico Territory were recorded as "Copper". The 1860 census was the first in which Native Americans living alongside white people and free people of color in the general population were recorded. Even then, the conductors of the census were instructed to only record "families of Indians who have renounced tribal rule, and who under state or territory laws exercise the rights of citizens".
With the 1880 census, and continuing over the next several censuses, the Census Bureau introduced a rubric for recording the racial identification of Native American respondents, primarily utilizing the blood quantum system, but also allowing some discretion on the part of the surveyor with regards to other factors, such as how the individual is perceived in their community. The 1890 census was the first to record both Native Americans living among the general population as well as in tribal communities, but due to a fire that destroyed many of the documents, the 1900 census is typically considered the oldest one to give an inclusive count of the country's Native American population. The passage of the Indian Citizenship Act in 1924 affected how Indigenous peoples from Latin America who were living in the Southwestern United States were recorded. As the Census Bureau was concerned that laborers from Mexico would attempt to portray themselves as Native Americans, many Indigenous people from Latin America were recorded only as Hispanic or Latino.
Starting with the 1960 census, the Census Bureau allowed for individuals to self-report their race, leading to many mixed-race individuals who may have previously been recorded by surveyors as another race to report themselves as Native American. Additionally, starting with the 2000 census, respondents could record more than one race, again leading to an increase in mixed-race individuals recording at least one of their races as Native American.