@article{oai:nagoya.repo.nii.ac.jp:02000155, author = {内田, 綾子 and Uchida, Ayako}, journal = {名古屋大学人文学研究論集}, month = {Mar}, note = {The Black Mesa area located in northern Arizona has been a historically controversial area. In the early twentieth century, the existence of vast mineral resources in Black Mesa was discovered. After the 1950s a Hopi tribal lawyer, John Boyden, played a major role in promoting federal and court decisions over the division of Black Mesa area between the Hopi and Navajo Tribes in order to start the tribal lease of coal mining with the Peabody Coal Company. With increasing pressures from the mining industry, the federal government also sought to determine the border of reservations between the Hopi and Navajo Tribes and to promote coal mining. However, this coal mining would soon cause negative effects for the tribes including environmental and cultural damage as well as the mass relocation of their peoples living in the traditional places of Black Mesa. This essay analyzes how these processes developed from the 1950s to the 70s by focusing on the politics over Black Mesa in the background of the economic and regional development of the American Southwest., 本研究はJSPS科研費(16K01977)の助成を受けたものである。}, pages = {349--367}, title = {ブラックメサと石炭開発 : ナヴァホ・ホピ土地問題のポリティクス}, volume = {4}, year = {2021} }