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A Certificate of Degree of Indian Blood or Certificate of Degree of Alaska Native Blood (both abbreviated CDIB) is an official U.S. document that certifies an individual possesses a specific fraction of Native American ancestry of a federally recognized Indian tribe, band, nation, pueblo, village, or community. They are issued by the Bureau of Indian Affairs after the applicant supplies a completed genealogy with supporting legal documents such as birth certificates, showing their descent, through one or both birth parents, from an enrolled Indian or an Indian listed in a base roll such as the Dawes Rolls. Blood degree cannot be obtained through adoptive parents. The blood degree on previously issued CDIBs or on the base rolls in the filer's ancestry are used to determine the filer's blood

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  • Certificate of Degree of Indian Blood (en)
  • Certificat de degré de sang indien (fr)
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  • A Certificate of Degree of Indian Blood or Certificate of Degree of Alaska Native Blood (both abbreviated CDIB) is an official U.S. document that certifies an individual possesses a specific fraction of Native American ancestry of a federally recognized Indian tribe, band, nation, pueblo, village, or community. They are issued by the Bureau of Indian Affairs after the applicant supplies a completed genealogy with supporting legal documents such as birth certificates, showing their descent, through one or both birth parents, from an enrolled Indian or an Indian listed in a base roll such as the Dawes Rolls. Blood degree cannot be obtained through adoptive parents. The blood degree on previously issued CDIBs or on the base rolls in the filer's ancestry are used to determine the filer's blood (en)
  • Le Certificat de degré de sang indien (en anglais : Certificate of Degree of Indian Blood (CDIB) ou Certificate of Degree of Alaska Native Blood ) est un document qui certifie qu'une personne possède un certain degré de sang indien d'une tribu ou communauté nord-amérindienne des États-Unis. Certaines tribus et l'administration demandent un pourcentage d'ancêtres minimum pour être reconnu. Par exemple, les indiens Cherokee de l'est exigent au moins 1/16e de sang, le Bureau des Affaires indiennes, pour obtenir le « Higher ED grant », une bourse à l'université, exige 1/4 degré minimum. (fr)
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  • A Certificate of Degree of Indian Blood or Certificate of Degree of Alaska Native Blood (both abbreviated CDIB) is an official U.S. document that certifies an individual possesses a specific fraction of Native American ancestry of a federally recognized Indian tribe, band, nation, pueblo, village, or community. They are issued by the Bureau of Indian Affairs after the applicant supplies a completed genealogy with supporting legal documents such as birth certificates, showing their descent, through one or both birth parents, from an enrolled Indian or an Indian listed in a base roll such as the Dawes Rolls. Blood degree cannot be obtained through adoptive parents. The blood degree on previously issued CDIBs or on the base rolls in the filer's ancestry are used to determine the filer's blood degree (unless they challenge them as inaccurate). Information collected for the filing is held confidential by privacy laws, except if the CDIB is related to assigned duties. A CDIB can show only the blood degree of one tribe or the total blood degree from all tribes in the filer's ancestry. Some tribes require a specific minimum degree of tribal ancestry for membership, which might require the first type of certificate, while some federal benefits programs require a minimum total Indian blood degree so an individual might require the second type of certificate to qualify. For example, the Eastern Band of Cherokee Indians requires at least 1/16 degree of Eastern Cherokee blood for tribal membership, whereas the Bureau of Indian Affairs' Higher Education Grant for college expenses requires a 1/4 degree minimum. A Certificate of Degree of Indian Blood does not establish membership in a tribe. Tribal membership is determined by tribal laws and may or may not require a CDIB or may require a separate tribal determination of ancestry or blood degree. The CDIB is controversial, from a racial politics perspective, and because non-federally recognized tribes are neither eligible for the card nor for the benefits which require one. Some groups, such as the Cherokee freedmen, were often not eligible for a CDIB because they are not Native American by blood or their degree of blood was not recorded in the base rolls (where Freedman was used instead of stating a degree). (en)
  • Le Certificat de degré de sang indien (en anglais : Certificate of Degree of Indian Blood (CDIB) ou Certificate of Degree of Alaska Native Blood ) est un document qui certifie qu'une personne possède un certain degré de sang indien d'une tribu ou communauté nord-amérindienne des États-Unis. Ce document est produit par le Bureau des affaires indiennes (BIA), après que le demandeur a fourni la liste complète de ses ascendants accompagné des documents juridiques le justifiant comme des certificats de naissance, mariage, etc. ou de l'inscription sur le . Ce certificat permet de s'inscrire sur le Dawes Rolls. Le BIA le fait sur la base du Dawes Act de 1887 et de ses amendements successifs, comme le de 1906. La proportion de sang ne peut pas être obtenu grâce à des parents adoptifs. Les informations inscrites y sont tenues confidentielles grâce aux lois sur la vie privée. Ce certificat ne permet pas d'établir si un individu est membre d'une communauté, il ne permet que d'obtenir certains droits administratifs, fiscaux et juridiques supplémentaires. Certaines tribus et l'administration demandent un pourcentage d'ancêtres minimum pour être reconnu. Par exemple, les indiens Cherokee de l'est exigent au moins 1/16e de sang, le Bureau des Affaires indiennes, pour obtenir le « Higher ED grant », une bourse à l'université, exige 1/4 degré minimum. L'existence du CDIB est controversée, beaucoup d'amérindiens n'ayant pas fait la démarche de s'inscrire. (fr)
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