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                                                                                                   March  12, 2024

American Indian, Alaska Native, and Tribal Population Data


Overview
Federal agencies collect population data, including on
American  Indian and Alaska Native (AI/AN) communities
and federally recognized tribes (hereinafter tribes), to
allocate funding and provide services. There is no uniform
definition of AI/AN populations or tribal enrollment, and
federal agencies rely on different sources for these data.
This In Focus describes selected Al/AN and tribal
population data sources, differences among these sources,
past collection and reporting practices, current efforts to
improve collection and reporting practices, and possible
congressional policy considerations.

Population Data Sources

Tribal Enrollment   Data
Tribal enrollment, or membership, is one source of
information on tribal populations. Every tribe generally
determines its own criteria for who is eligible to become a
tribal member, which may include factors such as degree of
tribal ancestry. Because tribes are sovereign nations, tribal
membership  is a political designation rather than a racial or
ethnic classification.

Many  tribes provide enrollment data on their official
websites. Others view enrollment data as proprietary
information. Although tribes historically have submitted
enrollment data to the Bureau of Indian Affairs (BIA),
currently, the agency does not publicly report those figures.

BIA's  Tribal Service Population  Data
BIA  calculates the tribal service population to determine
eligibility for its services. The Snyder Act of 1921 (25
U.S.C. §13) authorizes BIA to operate programs and spend
federal funds for the benefit and assistance of tribes and
individual tribal members throughout the United States.
BIA  determines a tribe's service population based on the
tribe's estimate of all tribal individuals who live on or near
its reservation (25 C.F.R. §20.100). There are about 326
tribal reservations with a total national service population
of nearly 2 million. Currently, tribal service population data
are not publicly available below the national level.

U .S. Census  Bureau's AlAN Data
The U.S. Census Bureau conducts the decennial
enumeration of the population required by the Constitution
(Article I, Section 2, Clause 3) and operates other programs
to measure the nation's people and economy.

The Census Bureau  relies on individual self-identification
as AI/AN using the Office of Management and Budget's
(OMB's)  standardized definitions for racial and ethnic
categories. OMB currently defines American Indian or
Alaska Native as a person having origins in any of the


original peoples of North and South America (including
Central America), and who maintains tribal affiliation or
community  attachment.

In 2020, the Census Bureau counted 9,666,058 people who
identified as AI/AN. This figure includes members of more
than one racial group. The Census Bureau also allows
people to list detailed ancestry, origin, and/or tribal
affiliation; selected groups appear in Table 1.

Table  I. Self-Reported Affiliation, 2020
(self-identification by American Indians and Alaska Natives)

                 Group                    Population

 Cherokee                                     1,513,326
 Aztec                                         583,981
 Navajo Nation                                 423,412
 Maya                                          300,519
 Blackfeet Tribe of the Blackfeet Indian       297,899
 Reservation of Montana
 Choctaw                                       255,557
 Alaska Native                                 241,797
 Chippewa                                       130,048
 Apache                                         129,589
 Sioux                                          126,571
 Source: U.S. Census Bureau, 2020 Census, Detailed Demographic
 and Housing Characteristics File A, Table T01001.
 Notes: This list contains 10 of the largest groupings out of more
 than 1,000 groups such as tribes and villages. Individuals may choose
 to identify as being part of more than one group and when that
 occurs will be counted more than once.

 Annual estimates for the overall AI/AN population are
 available from the Census Bureau's American Community
 Survey (ACS), a large-scale survey of U.S. households.
 Those estimates are available at the national level as well as
 for states, congressional districts, and other geographic
 areas. The decennial census, which provides an actual count
 of the AI/AN population and a more granular breakdown by
 self-identified tribal affiliation, is next scheduled for 2030.

 Differences Arong Data Sources
 The data sources described above provide varying
population estimates due to a number of factors, including
the absence of a statutory definition of AI/AN or tribal
populations.

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