Social Sciences, asked by upenderraopeddapongu, 7 months ago

who controlled the lives of Eskimos? ​

Answers

Answered by kyvalya777
5

Answer:

I think so

Explanation:

The governments in Canada[13][14][15] and the United States[16][17] have made moves to cease using the term Eskimo in official documents, but it has not been entirely eliminated, as the word is in some places written into tribal, and therefore national, legal terminology.[18] Canada officially uses the term Inuit to describe the Native people living in the country's northernmost sector.[13][14] The United States government legally uses Alaska Native[17] for the Yupik, Inuit, and Aleut, but also for non-Eskimo indigenous Alaskans including the Tlingit, the Haida, the Eyak, and the Tsimshian, in addition to at least nine separate northern Athabaskan/Dene peoples. The designation Alaska Native applies to enrolled tribal members only,[19] in contrast to individual Eskimo/Aleut persons claiming descent from the world's "most widespread aboriginal group".[20][21][22]

this might help u

Answered by Prettyboy1231
7

Answer:

Eskimo, any member of a group of peoples who, with the closely related Aleuts, constitute the chief element in the indigenous population of the Arctic and subarctic regions of Greenland, Canada, the United States, and far eastern Russia (Siberia). Early 21st-century population estimates indicated more than 135,000 individuals of Eskimo descent, with some 85,000 living in North America, 50,000 in Greenland, and the remainder in Siberia

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