We recognize that this phenomenon occurs and try to offer responsible removal policies to counter this.
It is a parody of the Indian removal policies of the 19th century.
Following the massacres and destruction of villages from 1811-13, however, the United States adopted a removal policy.
Cass was a central figure in formulating and implementing the Indian removal policy of the Jackson administration.
By 1860 the Delaware had reached consensus to leave Kansas, which was in accord with the government's Indian removal policy.
Medical experts criticize the removal policy, saying that it interferes with important bonding between the child and the mother.
The federal Indian removal policy of the 1830s forced tribes from the east to move west of the Mississippi River.
Jackson had been negotiating treaties and removal policies with Indian leaders for years before his election as president.
Jackson's support of removal policies can be best understood by examination of those prior cases he had personally negotiated, rather than those in post-presidential years.
Clark issued "an extermination order", which he gave to Lewis Cass, a man who played a central role in Jackson's removal policy.