Reading Comprehension
Passage Breakdown
In the 1970s some Native American groups sued in U.S. courts to win official recognition and protect land, but courts required legal kinds of proof like written records and clear deeds and used a narrow idea of tribe as self-government plus a defined territory. The Mashpee Wampanoag lost because their history and authority were passed down orally, so the court would not treat their testimony as the written proof it wanted. More recently, courts have begun to accept different kinds of evidence and to recognize that treating oral and written cultures the same way can be unfair.
Logic Breakdown
Scan the final paragraph for statements about how courts' treatment of evidence in tribal land claims has changed since the Mashpee suit; choose the answer that matches that described change.
Passage Stimulus
Passage Redacted
Unlock Full Passage4.Based on the passage, which one of the following can most reasonably be said to have occurred in the years since the Mashpee's lawsuit?
Correct Answer
D
The passage contrasts the Mashpee loss (courts' refusal to treat oral testimony as documentary evidence) with a later trend toward greater success for similar claims. Support: "In this instance, the disjunction between U.S. legal discourse and Mashpee culture—exemplified in the court's inability to \"understand\" the Mashpee's oral testimony as documentary evidence—rendered the suit unsuccessful." and "Similar claims have recently met with greater success, however, as U.S. courts have begun to acknowledge that the failure to accommodate differences in discourse between cultures can sometimes stand in the way of guaranteeing the fairness of legal decisions." Together these sentences most directly support choice D (courts more likely to accept oral testimony as evidence).
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