The Pueblos of New Mexico occupy a position in federal Indian law and political science that has no parallel anywhere else in the Americas. Twenty-one communities — the 19 Rio Grande Pueblos plus Zuni and Acoma — hold land under Spanish colonial grants confirmed by Mexico and subsequently guaranteed by the United States under the Treaty of Guadalupe Hidalgo in 1848, placing them in a legal category distinct from every other Native American tribe in the country. Their governance institutions, particularly the All Indian Pueblo Council reconstituted in 1922 during the Bursum Bill crisis, represent the oldest continuous inter-tribal government in North America. The scholarly tradition documenting this singular political reality runs from Adolph Bandelier's nineteenth-century fieldwork through the landmark Pueblo-voice anthropology of Alfonso Ortiz and Edward Dozier in the 1960s and 1970s, through Joe Sando's definitive Pueblo Nations in 1992, and into the contemporary governance scholarship of Regis Pecos and the tribal college movement. Collecting this literature is collecting the intellectual architecture of Indigenous self-governance in the American Southwest.
What distinguishes this canon from the broader Native American governance literature is the Pueblos' insistence on writing their own history. By the mid-twentieth century, three Pueblo scholars — Edward Dozier of Santa Clara Pueblo, Alfonso Ortiz of San Juan (Ohkay Owingeh) Pueblo, and Joe Sando of Jemez Pueblo — had produced foundational works of anthropology and history from within their own communities, challenging the outsider-anthropologist paradigm that had dominated Pueblo studies since Bandelier arrived in the Rio Grande valley in 1880. This shift from subject to author, from ethnographic object to sovereign narrator, is the intellectual through-line that connects the scholarship and makes it essential reading for anyone interested in Indigenous governance, federal Indian law, or the political history of New Mexico.
Last verified May 2026 · Original research by Josh Eldred
The Foundational Outsider Tradition: Bandelier through the Mid-Twentieth Century
Collecting New Mexico Pueblo Sovereignty & Governance Literature books are increasingly collectible, with foundational policy studies and legal histories commanding premium prices. The scholarly study of Pueblo governance begins with Adolph Francis Alphonse Bandelier (1840–1914), the Swiss-born archaeologist and ethnographer who arrived in New Mexico in August 1880 and spent the next decade conducting fieldwork among the Rio Grande Pueblos, particularly at Cochiti and the ancestral Pueblo sites in the Jemez Mountains and Frijoles Canyon (the area now named Bandelier National Monument). Bandelier's Final Report of Investigations Among the Indians of the Southwestern United States (Archaeological Institute of America, two volumes, 1890 and 1892) and his ethnographic novel The Delight Makers (Dodd, Mead & Company 1890) are the starting points of the outsider scholarly tradition. The Final Report is a collector target for its documentary value — the Archaeological Institute of America print runs were small, and fine copies of the two-volume set in original cloth are scarce. The Delight Makers, set in pre-contact Cochiti Pueblo, went through multiple editions across publishers and is more accessible on the secondary market, though the 1890 Dodd Mead first with original cloth binding is the collector artifact.
The early-to-mid twentieth century produced a generation of non-Pueblo scholars whose work remains essential reference material despite its outsider perspective. Charles H. Lange produced the landmark single-Pueblo ethnography Cochiti: A New Mexico Pueblo, Past and Present (University of Texas Press 1959), a comprehensive study covering Cochiti social organization, ceremonial life, agriculture, and political governance that remained the standard reference for decades. The 1959 UT Press first hardcover with original dust jacket is the Tier 1 Lange trophy — a university-press first edition with limited print run, fine copies with intact dust jacket are genuinely scarce. Lange also co-edited Southwestern Journals of Adolph F. Bandelier (UNM Press and University of Arizona Press, multiple volumes, 1966–1984), the critical scholarly edition of Bandelier's field journals that provides the documentary foundation for all subsequent Bandelier scholarship.
Florence Hawley Ellis (1906–1991) was a UNM anthropologist and archaeologist whose career spanning from the 1930s through the 1980s produced decades of Pueblo archaeology and ethnography research. Ellis served as expert witness in numerous Pueblo land and water claims cases before the Indian Claims Commission and in federal court, and her testimony and reports constitute an important body of documentary evidence for Pueblo governance and territorial claims. Her publications are primarily in journal articles and edited volumes rather than single-authored monographs, making her contribution difficult to collect as discrete trophy items but essential in the broader periodical and institutional literature. The American Antiquity, Southwestern Journal of Anthropology (now Journal of Anthropological Research), and El Palacio runs containing her work are the collector targets for Ellis scholarship.
The Smithsonian Institution's Bureau of American Ethnology publications from the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries — particularly the Annual Reports and Bulletins — contain foundational Pueblo governance documentation including Matilda Coxe Stevenson's work at Zuni (The Zuni Indians, BAE Annual Report 23, 1904) and Elsie Clews Parsons's multi-volume Pueblo Indian Religion (University of Chicago Press, two volumes, 1939). Parsons's work is particularly significant for governance collectors because Pueblo religious and political structures are inseparable — the caciques, war captains, and moiety heads who govern Pueblo communities hold offices that are simultaneously religious and political. The 1939 Chicago two-volume Parsons first is a substantial Tier 2 collector target; fine sets with both dust jackets are rare.
Edward Dozier: The First Pueblo Anthropologist
Edward Pasqual Dozier (1916–1971, closed pool) of Santa Clara Pueblo was the first Pueblo Indian to earn a PhD in anthropology (UCLA 1952, dissertation on the Keres-speaking pueblos) and the first to produce a major synthetic work of Pueblo scholarship from within the community. Dozier's career bridged the outsider and insider traditions: trained in the conventions of academic anthropology at a time when no Pueblo person had occupied that institutional position, he wrote as both a professional anthropologist and a member of the community he studied. His position at the University of Arizona allowed him to produce work that challenged the assumptions of his non-Pueblo colleagues while meeting the evidentiary standards of the discipline.
The Pueblo Indians of North America (Holt, Rinehart and Winston 1970 first hardcover) is Dozier's synthetic overview — the first comprehensive academic survey of the Pueblos written by a Pueblo scholar. The book covers all the Pueblo communities from the Rio Grande through the western Pueblos (Zuni, Hopi, and the Hopi-Tewa community at First Mesa where Dozier also conducted fieldwork), treating governance structures, social organization, religious practice, and the impact of Spanish colonialism and American administration. The 1970 Holt first hardcover with original dust jacket is the Tier 1 Dozier trophy. Dozier died in 1971 at age 55, making his signature pool extremely small and closing it early — signed Dozier copies are genuinely rare and trade at substantial premium when they appear.
Dozier's earlier Hano: A Tewa Indian Community in Arizona (Holt, Rinehart and Winston 1966) studies the Tewa-speaking community that migrated from the Rio Grande valley to First Mesa among the Hopi after the Pueblo Revolt of 1680 and maintained their distinct Tewa identity for nearly three centuries. The Hano study is important for governance collectors because it documents how Pueblo political and social structures survived transplantation — the Tewa moiety system and governance institutions persisted at First Mesa despite centuries of geographic separation from the Rio Grande Tewa communities. The 1966 Holt first hardcover is the Tier 2 Dozier trophy. Both Dozier volumes are in the Case Studies in Cultural Anthropology series edited by George and Louise Spindler, which gives them a distinctive series format and makes them identifiable as a matched pair on the shelf.
Alfonso Ortiz: The Tewa World and the Handbook
Alfonso Alex Ortiz (1939–1997, closed pool) of San Juan Pueblo (now Ohkay Owingeh) was the second Pueblo Indian to earn a PhD in anthropology (University of Chicago 1967) and the scholar whose work most fundamentally transformed the relationship between anthropology and the Pueblo communities it studied. Where Dozier wrote within the conventions of mid-century academic anthropology, Ortiz challenged those conventions by producing an ethnography that was simultaneously a work of scholarship and an act of cultural self-representation — The Tewa World is not merely a description of Tewa society but a Tewa person's articulation of the philosophical and cosmological principles that organize Tewa life.
The Tewa World: Space, Time, Being and Becoming in a Pueblo Society (University of Chicago Press 1969 first hardcover) describes the dual organization of Tewa Pueblo society through the Summer People and Winter People moiety system, the Made People (spiritual leaders), the Towa é (ritual clowns and mediators), and the Dry Food People (ordinary community members). The book's significance for governance collectors is that it demonstrates how Pueblo political authority is inseparable from cosmological order — the Winter Chief and Summer Chief who alternate governance authority through the year are not secular political officers but ritual leaders whose authority derives from their position in the Tewa cosmological structure. The 1969 University of Chicago Press first hardcover with original dust jacket is the Tier 1 Ortiz trophy. Chicago academic press first print runs were small; signed copies are rare given Ortiz's 1997 death from a heart attack at age 57. Fine signed firsts trade upper-three-figure to low-four-figure at specialist anthropology and Southwest book dealers.
Ortiz's editorial work was equally influential. New Perspectives on the Pueblos (UNM Press 1972, edited volume) brought together revisionist essays challenging established anthropological assumptions about Pueblo society. The two-volume Handbook of North American Indians, Volume 9: Southwest (Smithsonian Institution 1979) and Volume 10: Southwest (Smithsonian 1983), both edited by Ortiz, are the definitive encyclopedic reference works on Southwestern peoples. The Handbook volumes are institutional references rather than trophy-shelf items — the Smithsonian print runs were substantial — but no serious Pueblo governance library is complete without them. Individual Handbook chapters on specific Pueblos, water rights, governance, and land tenure by specialist contributors constitute a secondary canon within the volumes that serious collectors cross-reference with the standalone monographs.
Joe Sando: The Pueblo Voice of Pueblo History
Joe Simon Sando (1923–2011, closed pool) of Jemez Pueblo (Walatowa) was the historian who more than any other scholar placed Pueblo history in Pueblo hands. Where Dozier and Ortiz were academic anthropologists who happened to be Pueblo, Sando was a tribal historian who wrote explicitly as a Pueblo person telling his people's story. The distinction matters: Sando's work is not framed as ethnography or academic anthropology but as Indigenous historical narrative, and it carries the authority of a Jemez Pueblo elder who participated in the governance institutions he described.
Sando served in the U.S. Army during World War II, earned degrees from Eastern New Mexico University and Vanderbilt University, and worked as director of the Institute for Pueblo Indian Studies at the Indian Pueblo Cultural Center in Albuquerque. His institutional position at the IPCC gave him access to Pueblo oral histories and community archives that no outside scholar could replicate, and his decades of service to inter-Pueblo governance through the All Indian Pueblo Council gave him direct knowledge of the political dynamics he documented.
Nee Hemish: A History of Jemez Pueblo (UNM Press 1982 first hardcover) is the first Pueblo-authored single-Pueblo tribal history — the Jemez counterpart to Lange's Cochiti, but written from inside the community rather than from the anthropological outside. The book covers Jemez history from the pre-contact period through the Pueblo Revolt, the Spanish reconquest, the American period, and into the twentieth century. The 1982 UNM Press first hardcover with original dust jacket is the Tier 1 Sando trophy for Jemez-specific collecting. UNM Press first print runs of the early 1980s were modest; fine copies with intact dust jacket are scarce on the secondary market.
Pueblo Nations: Eight Centuries of Pueblo Indian History (Clear Light Publishers Santa Fe 1992 first edition) is THE foundational work of Pueblo-authored sovereignty literature — the comprehensive overview that covers all the Pueblo communities across eight centuries of continuous habitation, governance, resistance, and adaptation. Sando traces the political evolution from the pre-contact Pueblo world through Spanish colonization, the Pueblo Revolt of 1680, Mexican independence, American annexation, the Bursum Bill crisis, the Indian Reorganization Act era, and the self-determination period. The book is simultaneously a work of history and a political document — Sando writes as an advocate for Pueblo sovereignty and self-governance as well as a narrator of events. The 1992 Clear Light first edition is the cornerstone collector target for the entire Pueblo governance canon. Signed Sando copies of Pueblo Nations trade at meaningful premium given his 2011 closed pool.
Companion Sando bibliography: The Pueblo Indians (Indian Historian Press, San Francisco 1976, an earlier and shorter Pueblo overview preceding the definitive Pueblo Nations); Pueblo Profiles: Cultural Identity through Centuries of Change (Clear Light Publishers 1998, individual profiles of each Pueblo community); Po'pay: Leader of the First American Revolution (Clear Light 2005, co-edited with Herman Agoyo, the Pueblo-voice treatment of the 1680 Revolt's leader, published in conjunction with the installation of the Po'pay statue in the National Statuary Hall in the U.S. Capitol). All Clear Light Sando titles are collector targets; Clear Light Publishers of Santa Fe specialized in Pueblo and Southwest Native publications and had modest print runs appropriate to their regional specialty-publisher status.
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The Legal Canon: Pueblo Lands, Sovereignty, and Federal Indian Law
The legal history of Pueblo sovereignty is structured around a series of federal statutes and court decisions that together define the Pueblos' unique position in American law. Collectors of this literature are assembling a canon that spans law reviews, case reporters, government documents, and the secondary treatise literature — a different collecting challenge from the monograph-centered anthropological canon.
The Bursum Bill and the Pueblo Lands Act of 1924. Senator Holm O. Bursum's 1922 bill (S. 3855) would have validated non-Indian claims to Pueblo lands by shifting the burden of proof to the Pueblos. The bill galvanized the Pueblo communities into collective political action, reconstituting the All Indian Pueblo Council in November 1922 at Santo Domingo Pueblo — the first unified inter-Pueblo political assembly since the Pueblo Revolt of 1680. The campaign to defeat the Bursum Bill, supported by John Collier, Mabel Dodge Luhan, and the General Federation of Women's Clubs, was one of the landmark moments in twentieth-century Indian-rights advocacy. The Pueblo Lands Act of 1924 (43 Stat. 636) established the Pueblo Lands Board to adjudicate competing claims. The primary sources for the Bursum Bill fight are in the Congressional Record, the AIPC proceedings, and the John Collier papers. The secondary literature includes Kenneth Philp's John Collier's Crusade for Indian Reform 1920-1954 (University of Arizona Press 1977) and the relevant chapters of Sando's Pueblo Nations. The Pueblo Lands Board records are held at the National Archives and Records Administration, Denver branch.
Santa Clara Pueblo v. Martinez, 436 U.S. 49 (1978). The landmark Supreme Court sovereignty case in which Julia Martinez challenged a Santa Clara Pueblo ordinance denying tribal membership to children of female (but not male) members who married outside the tribe. Justice Thurgood Marshall's opinion held that the Indian Civil Rights Act of 1968 did not authorize suits against tribes in federal court except for habeas corpus, effectively affirming tribal authority over internal governance including membership determinations. The case is the foundational modern precedent for tribal governmental sovereignty and appears in every federal Indian law casebook. The doctrinal literature includes Gloria Valencia-Weber's analysis in the New Mexico Law Review and extensive treatment in Felix Cohen's Handbook of Federal Indian Law (1942, revised by Rennard Strickland et al. 1982, and the 2005 and 2012 LexisNexis editions). For book collectors, the relevant treatises are the successive editions of Cohen's Handbook (the 1942 Government Printing Office first is the Tier 1 legal trophy for the entire federal Indian law canon, though its scope is national rather than Pueblo-specific) and the Getches-Wilkinson-Williams-Fletcher Cases and Materials on Federal Indian Law (West Publishing, multiple editions from 1979).
The All Indian Pueblo Council (AIPC). The AIPC — now the All Pueblo Council of Governors — traces its origins to the pre-contact inter-Pueblo gatherings and was formally reconstituted in 1922 during the Bursum Bill fight. It is commonly cited as the oldest inter-tribal government in North America. The AIPC's institutional publications, meeting minutes, and position papers constitute an important body of primary-source Pueblo governance documentation that is held primarily at the Indian Pueblo Cultural Center in Albuquerque and at the Center for Southwest Research at UNM. The AIPC's role in establishing the Indian Pueblo Cultural Center (opened 1976), in coordinating Pueblo responses to federal legislation, and in developing the contemporary All Pueblo Council of Governors structure is documented in Sando's Pueblo Nations and in the IPCC's own institutional publications.
Water Rights: Aamodt, Abeyta, and the Pueblo Doctrine
Pueblo water rights constitute one of the most complex areas of western water law, and the literature is correspondingly specialized. The Pueblos hold water rights under multiple overlapping legal doctrines: aboriginal rights predating European contact, Spanish colonial rights under the Laws of the Indies (which recognized the Pueblos' prior use of irrigation water), federal reserved rights under the Winters doctrine (Winters v. United States, 207 U.S. 564, 1908), and state-law prior-appropriation rights. The interaction of these doctrines — particularly the question of whether Pueblo water rights are "prior and paramount" to all subsequent appropriations, or whether they are subject to the state's prior-appropriation system — has produced decades of litigation and a substantial body of legal scholarship.
The Aamodt adjudication (State of New Mexico ex rel. State Engineer v. Aamodt, No. 66-cv-6639) was filed in 1966 and involved the water rights of Nambé, Pojoaque, San Ildefonso, and Tesuque Pueblos in the Pojoaque River Basin north of Santa Fe. It became the longest-running water-rights case in New Mexico history, not resolved until the Aamodt Litigation Settlement Act was signed in December 2010 as Title VI of the Claims Resolution Act (Public Law 111-291). The settlement provided federal funding for a regional water system to replace the Pueblos' dependence on surface irrigation water from the overappropriated Pojoaque basin. The Abeyta adjudication involved Taos Pueblo's water rights in the Rio Pueblo de Taos and Rio Hondo watersheds and was resolved through the Taos Pueblo Indian Water Rights Settlement Act of 2010 (Title V of the same Claims Resolution Act). Both settlements required decades of negotiation balancing Pueblo senior rights against non-Indian water users' established uses.
The principal book-length treatment is Charles DuMars, Marilyn O'Leary, and Albert Utton's Pueblo Indian Water Rights: Struggle for a Precious Resource (University of Arizona Press 1984 first edition), the standard reference on Pueblo water-rights law and litigation history. The 1984 Arizona first is the Tier 1 water-rights-specific collector target. The Natural Resources Journal (published by UNM School of Law) and the New Mexico Law Review contain the principal law-review literature on Pueblo water rights, with substantial contributions from UNM Law School faculty including Albert Utton, Peter Sly, and Charles DuMars across decades. These journal runs are institutional-library collector targets rather than trophy-shelf items, but the complete Natural Resources Journal run from the 1960s through the 2010 settlement period is essential for serious water-rights research. Florence Hawley Ellis's expert-witness testimony and reports in both the Aamodt and other Pueblo water-rights proceedings are held at UNM's Center for Southwest Research.
Blue Lake, Sacred Sites, and the Self-Determination Era
The Blue Lake return (1970) is the single most symbolically significant event in twentieth-century Pueblo governance. Blue Lake (Ba Whyea in Taos Tiwa) is the sacred lake in the Sangre de Cristo Mountains above Taos Pueblo that is central to Taos Pueblo religious practice. In 1906, President Theodore Roosevelt included the Blue Lake area in what became Carson National Forest by executive order, subjecting the sacred site to multiple-use management including grazing, logging, and recreational access. Taos Pueblo fought for the return of Blue Lake for 64 years. On December 15, 1970, President Richard Nixon signed Public Law 91-550, returning 48,000 acres including Blue Lake to Taos Pueblo in trust status — the first time the United States government returned a substantial tract of land to a Native American tribe on the grounds that the land was sacred.
The Blue Lake return established two precedents: that Native American sacred sites on federal land could be returned to tribal control, and that Native American religious freedom could require exclusive possession of land. The principal book-length treatment is R.C. Gordon-McCutchan's The Taos Indians and the Battle for Blue Lake (Red Crane Books, Santa Fe 1991 first edition), the standard narrative history of the 64-year campaign. The 1991 Red Crane first is a regional-press title with modest print run and is the Tier 1 collector target for the Blue Lake narrative. The broader Nixon-era Indian policy context is covered in Charles Wilkinson's Blood Struggle: The Rise of Modern Indian Nations (W.W. Norton 2005) and in the relevant sections of Vine Deloria Jr.'s Custer Died for Your Sins: An Indian Manifesto (Macmillan 1969) and Behind the Trail of Broken Treaties (Delacorte 1974), though Deloria's focus is national rather than Pueblo-specific.
The self-determination era in Pueblo governance runs from the Indian Self-Determination and Education Assistance Act of 1975 (Public Law 93-638) through the present. Under 638 contracting and subsequent self-governance compacting, individual Pueblos assumed management of programs previously administered by the Bureau of Indian Affairs — a transfer of operational authority that fundamentally restructured the BIA-Pueblo relationship. The contemporary governance landscape includes the tribal college movement (the Southwest Indian Polytechnic Institute in Albuquerque, the Institute of American Indian Arts in Santa Fe, and the Santa Fe Indian School's Leadership Institute under Regis Pecos), the gaming-era economic development that followed the Indian Gaming Regulatory Act of 1988 and the Pueblo-state gaming compacts — economic independence that also supports Pueblo ceremonial and cultural preservation — and the continued evolution of the All Pueblo Council of Governors as the inter-Pueblo governance institution.
Regis Pecos of Cochiti Pueblo, former governor and co-director of the Leadership Institute at the Santa Fe Indian School, represents the contemporary Pueblo governance tradition. Pecos's work on Indigenous governance education, community leadership development, and Pueblo self-determination has been influential across Indian Country, though his contributions are primarily in lectures, institutional reports, and policy documents rather than in commercially published monographs — making his work an archival and institutional-publication collecting challenge rather than a standard book-collecting project. Herman Agoyo of San Juan (Ohkay Owingeh) Pueblo, Sando's co-editor on Po'pay (Clear Light 2005) and a longtime Pueblo political leader, similarly represents the practitioner tradition in Pueblo governance whose contributions are documented primarily in institutional records and oral-history collections.
The Comparative and Theoretical Canon
Laura Nader's Harmony Ideology: Justice and Control in a Zapotec Mountain Village (Stanford University Press 1990 first edition) is an important comparative text for Pueblo governance collectors. Nader, a UC Berkeley anthropologist (and sister of Ralph Nader), developed the concept of "harmony ideology" — the way communities use consensus-seeking and dispute-avoidance as mechanisms of social control — through fieldwork in a Zapotec community in Oaxaca, Mexico. The comparative implications for Pueblo governance are substantial: Pueblo communities have long been described by outside observers as "harmonious" and "non-confrontational," and Nader's analytical framework provides tools for understanding how that apparent harmony functions as a governance mechanism rather than merely a cultural trait. The 1990 Stanford first is a Tier 2 collector target for the governance-theory dimension of the Pueblo canon.
The broader comparative framework includes Vine Deloria Jr. and Clifford Lytle's The Nations Within: The Past and Future of American Indian Sovereignty (Pantheon 1984), which situates Pueblo governance within the national landscape of tribal sovereignty and federal Indian law. Stephen Cornell's The Return of the Native: American Indian Political Resurgence (Oxford University Press 1988) provides the political-science framework for understanding the self-determination movement. David E. Wilkins and K. Tsianina Lomawaima's Uneven Ground: American Indian Sovereignty and Federal Law (University of Oklahoma Press 2001) is the standard contemporary introduction to the sovereignty paradox — the tension between inherent tribal sovereignty and federal plenary power — that defines the legal environment in which all Pueblo governance operates.
Felix Cohen's Handbook of Federal Indian Law (Government Printing Office 1942, the foundational treatise on the legal status of Indian tribes in the United States) is the anchor of the legal-theory canon. The 1942 GPO first is the Tier 1 trophy of the entire federal Indian law canon and is relevant to Pueblo governance collecting because it established the doctrinal framework within which all subsequent Pueblo legal analysis operates. Subsequent editions — the Rennard Strickland et al. 1982 revision (Michie Bobbs-Merrill) and the 2005 and 2012 LexisNexis editions — are working-library references rather than trophy items. The Pueblo-specific content in Cohen's successive editions documents the evolution of federal legal analysis of the Pueblos' unique status.
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Theodore Roosevelt's Executive Order Era and the BIA Relationship
The Theodore Roosevelt administration's executive-order actions of the early 1900s — including the incorporation of Pueblo sacred lands and watershed areas into the emerging national forest system — a conflict connected to the broader territorial-era political history — established the federal-land-management overlay on Pueblo territory that produced the Blue Lake crisis and numerous subsequent Pueblo land-and-water conflicts. Roosevelt's conservation agenda, implemented through executive orders creating national forests, monuments, and reserves across the West, did not distinguish between uninhabited public domain and lands that Pueblo communities had used for centuries for ceremonial, agricultural, and subsistence purposes. The executive-order era is documented primarily in the Federal Register and in the administrative histories of Carson National Forest, Santa Fe National Forest, and Cibola National Forest — institutional documents that are archival-collection targets rather than trade-book collector items.
The Bureau of Indian Affairs relationship with the Pueblos has a distinctive character because the Pueblos' fee-simple land tenure (derived from Spanish grants) placed them outside the standard reservation-trust-land framework that governed the BIA's relationship with most other tribes. The BIA established day schools and agencies in the Pueblo communities during the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries, but the Pueblos' existing governance institutions — the caciques, war captains, and council systems that predated European contact — persisted alongside the BIA administrative apparatus in a way that did not occur in most other tribal contexts. The literature on the BIA-Pueblo relationship is primarily in government documents, agency records (held at the National Archives Denver branch), and in the relevant sections of the synthetic works by Sando, Dozier, and Ortiz. Sophie Aberle's The Pueblo Indians of New Mexico: Their Land, Economy, and Civil Organization (American Anthropological Association Memoir 70, 1948) is an important mid-century treatment by a former United Pueblos Agency superintendent that documents the BIA's administrative perspective on Pueblo governance during the New Deal and Indian Reorganization Act era.
The Institutional Publishing Canon
Five publishers anchor the Pueblo governance literature. Clear Light Publishers of Santa Fe (founded 1981 by Harmon Houghton) was the principal Pueblo-voice publisher, producing Joe Sando's Pueblo Nations 1992, Pueblo Profiles 1998, and Po'pay 2005 as well as substantial additional Pueblo cultural publications. Clear Light print runs were modest — regional specialty press serving the Southwest book market — and first editions in fine condition are meaningful collector targets. University of New Mexico Press in Albuquerque is the primary academic publisher for New Mexico Pueblo scholarship, producing Sando's Nee Hemish 1982, Ortiz's New Perspectives 1972, Lange's Bandelier journals, and decades of Pueblo-related academic monographs. University of Oklahoma Press in Norman publishes the Civilization of the American Indian Series (the principal academic-press Native American monograph series, 280+ volumes since 1932), with substantial Pueblo representation. School of American Research Press (SAR Press, Santa Fe, now the School for Advanced Research) has published important Pueblo governance and cultural scholarship since the 1930s, including proceedings of SAR Advanced Seminars on topics including Pueblo ritual and governance. University of Arizona Press in Tucson publishes the Pueblo water-rights literature (DuMars-O'Leary-Utton 1984) and substantial Pueblo cultural scholarship including the Sun Tracks series.
The Indian Pueblo Cultural Center (IPCC), located at 2401 12th Street NW in Albuquerque and owned by the 19 NM Pueblos via the All Pueblo Council of Governors, is both a museum and a publishing institution. IPCC publications include exhibition catalogs, educational materials, and institutional reports that document contemporary Pueblo governance, cultural practice, and community development. These publications are modest-print-run institutional items that are difficult to find on the standard secondary market but are essential for comprehensive Pueblo governance collecting. The IPCC's library and archive collection, while not publicly accessible at the same level as a university library, holds primary-source Pueblo governance documentation including AIPC proceedings and individual-Pueblo historical materials.
Five Identification Problems
Problem one: Sando Pueblo Nations edition identification. The 1992 Clear Light Publishers first edition is the collector target. Clear Light produced subsequent printings and a softcover edition that are working copies rather than collector items. Identify the first by the 1992 copyright date, Clear Light imprint, and first-printing statement on the copyright page. The Clear Light colophon and Santa Fe imprint distinguish the original from any subsequent reissue.
Problem two: Ortiz Tewa World edition sorting. The 1969 University of Chicago Press first hardcover with original dust jacket is the Tier 1 trophy. Chicago produced a paperback edition in the Phoenix Books series and subsequent printings. The 1969 first is identifiable by the Chicago imprint, hardcover binding, and first-edition copyright-page statement. The Phoenix Books paperback is a working-library copy. A 2003 reissue exists but lacks the original dust-jacket art.
Problem three: Dozier authentication challenge. Edward Dozier's 1971 death makes his signature pool extremely small — he published his major works only in 1966 (Hano) and 1970 (Pueblo Indians) and died the following year. Any claimed Dozier signature requires careful provenance verification. The Holt, Rinehart and Winston Case Studies series format — distinctive physical design with series branding — makes the volumes identifiable, but signed copies are rare enough that most serious Pueblo governance collections will hold unsigned firsts.
Problem four: Smithsonian Handbook volume condition. The Ortiz-edited Handbook of North American Indians volumes 9 (1979) and 10 (1983) are large-format institutional reference works that were heavily used in university and museum libraries. Library discard copies with institutional stamps, Mylar jacket protectors, and spine labels are common on the secondary market. Fine copies in original Smithsonian cloth binding without institutional provenance trade premium; fine copies with original dust jackets trade meaningful premium given the large format and heavy institutional use that damaged most copies.
Problem five: Legal-literature collecting format. Much of the Pueblo governance legal canon exists in law reviews, case reporters, and government documents rather than in commercially published monographs. Collectors building a comprehensive Pueblo sovereignty library must work through the institutional-publication format — bound law-review volumes, Government Printing Office publications, agency reports, Indian Claims Commission findings — that does not fit neatly into standard book-collecting paradigms. The Natural Resources Journal (UNM), the New Mexico Law Review, and the American Indian Law Review (University of Oklahoma) are the principal journal targets.
Three-Tier Collector Market
Tier 1 trophy (upper-two-figure to low-four-figure): Signed Sando Pueblo Nations Clear Light 1992 first (closed pool 2011, the cornerstone); signed Sando Nee Hemish UNM 1982 first; signed Ortiz Tewa World Chicago 1969 first hardcover with dust jacket (closed pool 1997, genuinely rare signed); signed Dozier Pueblo Indians Holt 1970 first (closed pool 1971, extremely rare signed); Lange Cochiti UT Press 1959 first hardcover with dust jacket (scarce in fine condition); Cohen Handbook of Federal Indian Law GPO 1942 first (the legal-canon anchor); Bandelier Final Report two-volume set 1890-1892 in original cloth (the nineteenth-century archaeological-ethnographic foundation); Parsons Pueblo Indian Religion Chicago 1939 two-volume set with jackets.
Tier 2 collector targets (mid-two-figure to low-three-figure): Unsigned Sando Pueblo Nations Clear Light 1992 first; unsigned Ortiz Tewa World Chicago 1969 first; Dozier Hano Holt 1966 first; Dozier Pueblo Indians Holt 1970 first unsigned; Sando Pueblo Profiles Clear Light 1998 first; Sando-Agoyo Po'pay Clear Light 2005 first; DuMars-O'Leary-Utton Pueblo Indian Water Rights Arizona 1984 first; Gordon-McCutchan Taos Indians and the Battle for Blue Lake Red Crane 1991 first; Ortiz New Perspectives on the Pueblos UNM 1972 first; Nader Harmony Ideology Stanford 1990 first; Aberle Pueblo Indians of New Mexico AAA Memoir 70 1948; Smithsonian Handbook volumes 9 and 10 in fine condition with dust jackets; Deloria-Lytle Nations Within Pantheon 1984 first; Cornell Return of the Native Oxford 1988 first; Wilkinson Blood Struggle Norton 2005 first.
Tier 3 working library (under fifty dollars): Subsequent printings and softcover editions of all the above; university-press paperback reissues of Sando, Ortiz, and Dozier; used law-school casebooks (Getches-Wilkinson Federal Indian Law successive editions); ex-library Smithsonian Handbook volumes; Cohen Handbook later editions; Bandelier Delight Makers reprint editions; general Southwest and Native American history survey texts with Pueblo governance chapters; IPCC educational publications; Philp John Collier's Crusade Arizona 1977; government documents and Congressional hearing records related to Pueblo legislation.
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Collection-Building Strategy
Foundation phase: Start with the three Pueblo-voice cornerstone texts — Sando Pueblo Nations 1992, Ortiz Tewa World 1969, Dozier Pueblo Indians 1970 — in any edition. Add the Smithsonian Handbook volumes 9 and 10 (even ex-library copies provide the essential reference) and a current edition of Cohen's Handbook of Federal Indian Law (the 2012 LexisNexis edition is the most comprehensive). These five items establish the framework: Pueblo-voice history, Pueblo-voice anthropology, and the legal-doctrinal architecture.
Depth phase: Add the single-Pueblo studies — Sando Nee Hemish 1982 for Jemez, Lange Cochiti 1959 for Cochiti, Dozier Hano 1966 for the Tewa diaspora. Add the water-rights literature (DuMars-O'Leary-Utton 1984) and the Blue Lake narrative (Gordon-McCutchan 1991). Acquire Ortiz's New Perspectives on the Pueblos 1972 and the comparative-theory titles (Nader Harmony Ideology, Deloria-Lytle Nations Within). Begin assembling the law-review literature on Pueblo sovereignty and water rights from the Natural Resources Journal and New Mexico Law Review.
Trophy phase: Target signed Sando Pueblo Nations Clear Light 1992 first (the closed-pool cornerstone); signed Ortiz Tewa World Chicago 1969 first with dust jacket; Lange Cochiti UT 1959 first with dust jacket in fine condition; Bandelier Final Report 1890-1892 two-volume set in original cloth; Parsons Pueblo Indian Religion 1939 two-volume set with jackets; Cohen Handbook GPO 1942 first. At this phase you are building a trophy library that documents the full arc from nineteenth-century outsider scholarship through Pueblo-voice self-representation to contemporary legal-and-political sovereignty.
NMLP Intake Position
Pueblo sovereignty and governance literature arrives at NMLP through several distinctive donor streams. UNM Law School and Political Science faculty estates yield substantial holdings in federal Indian law casebooks, law-review offprints, and the legal treatise canon. UNM Anthropology Department estates carry the Ortiz, Dozier, and Lange tradition of Pueblo ethnographic scholarship, often including signed copies from faculty who knew these authors as colleagues. Retired attorneys and judges who practiced in federal Indian law or New Mexico water law contribute Aamodt and Abeyta case materials, federal Indian law treatises, and Pueblo Lands Board documentation. Indian Pueblo Cultural Center-adjacent Albuquerque households yield Sando first editions, AIPC publications, and IPCC institutional materials. Santa Fe political and policy community estates contribute SAR Press publications and state government Indian affairs documentation. Northern New Mexico Pueblo-community household donations carry Sando and Ortiz home-community copies — sometimes with personal inscriptions that establish provenance from within the Pueblo scholarly community.
Tier 1 trophy items route through NMLP's book evaluation and resale services to specialist Southwest history and anthropology dealers (SellBooksABQ, Old Santa Fe Trail Books, Collected Works Santa Fe) or specialist auction (Heritage Western Americana, Swann Galleries). Tier 2 trade firsts route through SellBooksABQ standard hand-sort with Pueblo governance collector outreach. Tier 3 subsequent printings route to APS Title I schools (particularly relevant given the New Mexico social studies and history curriculum requirements on Pueblo governance and sovereignty), the UNM Native American Studies program, UNM Law School library, Indian Pueblo Cultural Center institutional donations, tribal libraries across the 19 Pueblos, and the regional community library partnership network. Ceremonial or culturally restricted material requires specialist cultural-protocol consultation and routes to UNM Center for Southwest Research or Indian Pueblo Cultural Center for institutional disposition — donor contributions fund this specialized handling.
Free statewide pickup anywhere in New Mexico with no condition limit and no minimum quantity. Call or text 702-496-4214 to schedule. Pueblo sovereignty and governance literature is among the material I most actively work to place with researchers, students, tribal libraries, and community institutions across the state.
External References
- Indian Pueblo Cultural Center — Albuquerque, owned by 19 NM Pueblos via All Pueblo Council of Governors
- Clear Light Publishers, Santa Fe — Sando's Pueblo Nations 1992, Pueblo Profiles 1998, Po'pay 2005
- University of New Mexico Press — Sando Nee Hemish, Ortiz New Perspectives, Lange Bandelier journals
- School for Advanced Research (SAR), Santa Fe — SAR Press, Pueblo governance and cultural scholarship
- University of Oklahoma Press — Civilization of the American Indian Series
- University of Arizona Press — DuMars-O'Leary-Utton Pueblo Indian Water Rights 1984
- UNM Center for Southwest Research — Pueblo governance archival holdings
- Wikipedia: Joe S. Sando
- Wikipedia: Alfonso Ortiz
- Wikipedia: Edward P. Dozier
- Wikipedia: Florence Hawley Ellis
- Wikipedia: All Pueblo Council of Governors
- Wikipedia: Santa Clara Pueblo v. Martinez
- Wikipedia: Pueblo Lands Act of 1924
- Wikipedia: Laura Nader
- Wikipedia: Adolph Bandelier
Related on This Site
- Pueblo Revolt of 1680 Books — the foundational sovereignty event, Po'pay, the twelve-year independence period, and the reconquest literature
- NM Native American Literature — Momaday, Silko, Ortiz, and the literary tradition emerging from Pueblo communities
- Pueblo Pottery Books — the material-culture canon paralleling the governance literature
- NM Spanish Colonial Historians — Simmons, Kessell, Chávez, and the colonial-era context for Pueblo land tenure
- NM Land Grants Literature — the parallel Hispano land-grant tradition and the overlapping legal framework
- NM Water Rights & Environmental Literature — the broader water-law canon surrounding the Pueblo adjudications
- Zuni and Hopi Cultural Scholarship — the western Pueblo governance and cultural traditions
- NM Archaeology Books — Bandelier, Hewett, and the archaeological tradition providing pre-contact Pueblo governance context
- Pueblo Revival Architecture Books — the built-environment dimension of Pueblo cultural sovereignty
- Comanche, Apache, and Plains Warfare Books — the external-threat context that shaped inter-Pueblo political alliances
Cite This Guide
Eldred, J. (May 2026). Collecting New Mexico Pueblo Sovereignty & Governance Literature. New Mexico Literacy Project.
https://newmexicoliteracyproject.org/new-mexico-pueblo-sovereignty-governance-books-collecting
Content is original research by Josh Eldred. Licensed under CC BY 4.0. Cite with attribution.