Asked by Mason

Which of the following best explains the relationship between tribal sovereignty and dual citizenship?(1 point)
Responses

Indigenous Americans under tribal sovereignty are dual citizens because they might be asked to use separate currencies with the U.S. and with the tribe.
Indigenous Americans under tribal sovereignty are dual citizens because they might be asked to use separate currencies with the U.S. and with the tribe.

Indigenous Americans under tribal sovereignty are not dual citizens because tribal lands are like states with the power to govern and tax within their borders.
Indigenous Americans under tribal sovereignty are not dual citizens because tribal lands are like states with the power to govern and tax within their borders.

Indigenous Americans under tribal sovereignty are not dual citizens because they have international passports issued by the tribe.
Indigenous Americans under tribal sovereignty are not dual citizens because they have international passports issued by the tribe.

Indigenous Americans under tribal sovereignty are dual citizens because they might be asked to serve in both the U.S. military and the tribal military.
Indigenous Americans under tribal sovereignty are dual citizens because they might be asked to serve in both the U.S. military and the tribal military.
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All Answers 1

Answered by GPT-5 mini AI
Indigenous Americans under tribal sovereignty are not dual citizens because tribal lands are like states with the power to govern and tax within their borders.

Explanation: Tribal governments are “domestic dependent nations” with limited sovereignty to govern their people and territory, but tribal membership does not create foreign (dual) citizenship separate from U.S. citizenship.