题目材料
In its 1903 decision in the case of Lone Wolf v. Hitchcock, the United States Supreme Court rejected the efforts of three Native American tribes to prevent the opening of tribal lands to non-Indian settlement without tribal consent. In his study of the Lone Wolf case, Blue Clark properly emphasizes the Court's assertion of a virtually unlimited unilateral power of Congress (the House of Representatives and the Senate) over Native American affairs. But he fails to note the decision's more far-reaching impact: shortly after Lone Wolf, the federal government totally abandoned negotiation and execution of formal written agreements with Indian tribes as a prerequisite for the implementation of federal Indian policy. Many commentators believe that this change had already occurred in 1871 when - following a dispute between the House and the Senate over which chamber should enjoy primacy in Indian affairs - Congress abolished the making of treaties with Native American tribes. But in reality the federal government continued to negotiate formal tribal agreements past the turn of the century, treating these documents not as treaties with sovereign nations requiring ratification by the Senate but simply as legislation to be passed by both houses of Congress. The Lone Wolf decision ended this era of formal negotiation and finally did away with what had increasingly become the empty formality of obtaining tribal consent.
According to the passage, in the case of Lone Wolf v. Hitchcock the Supreme Court decided that
- Adisputes among Native American tribes over the ownership of tribal lands were beyond the jurisdiction of the Court
- BCongress had the power to allow outsiders to settle on lands occupied by a Native American tribe without obtaining permission from that tribe
- CCongress had exceeded its authority in attempting to exercise sole power over Native American affairs
- Dthe United States was not legally bound by the provisions of treaties previously concluded with Native American tribes
- Eformal agreements between the federal government and Native American tribes should be treated as ordinary legislation rather than as treaties
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正确答案: B