Hopi-Navajo Relocation

What is affected
Communal
Type of violation Forced eviction
Dispossession/confiscation
Privatization of public goods and services
Environmental/climate event
Date 01 January 1882
Region NA [ North America ]
Country United States
Location Big Mountain, Arizona

Affected persons

Total 16000
Men 0
Women 0
Children 0
Indigenous
Proposed solution
Details Bennett_freeze.png
CRSupdate3-02-2026.pdf
Bennett_freeze.png
Development Hopi-Navajo_2026.docx
Forced eviction
Costs
Privatization of public goods and services
Land Losses
Housing Losses
Water
Sanitation
Energy
Other

Duty holder(s) /responsible party(ies)

State
Bureau of Indian Affairs
Brief narrative

History and Background of the Land Dispute

The Navajo-Hopi Land Dispute refers to two disputes between the Navajo Nation and the Hopi Tribe that were created by the Federal government.

First Dispute

The first dispute was created by the Federal government through an Executive Order in 1882 and ultimately led to the Relocation Act which settled the dispute by partitioning the disputed lands and forcibly relocation citizens of each Tribe off the partitioned land of the other.

Second Dispute

The second dispute was created by the Federal government through an Act of Congress in 1934 and led to the BIA institutional the Bennett Freeze in 1966. This was a development freeze on approximately 1.5 million acres of western Navajo lands. The Tribes resolved this dispute in 2006 and the Freeze was lifted in 2009.

Impacted Communities

In 1882, United States President Chester Arthur issued an Executive Order creating conflicting land interests between the Navajo Nation and Hopi Tribe. This land dispute led to the 1974 Navajo Hopi Settlement Act (Relocation Act), which partitioned the disputed area into the Navajo Partitioned Lands (NPL) and Hopi Partitioned Lands (HPL) and legislated for the forced relocation of Navajo citizens from their ancestral homes on the HPL. While Congress initially believed that 1,000 Navajos would need to be relocated, the actual number has been over 16,000. To facilitate the relocation and administer benefits to relocatees, Congress created the Office of Navajo and Hopi Indian Relocation (ONHIR). ONHIR is directed by a Commissioner appointed by the U.S. President. This role has been vacant since 1994. In 1934, Congressed passed legislation clarifying the western boundary of the Navajo Nation. This legislation created a separate land dispute between the Navajo Nation and the Hopi Tribe. This land dispute led to the institution of the Bennett Freeze by the Federal government in 1966, which was a devastating development freeze on over 1.5 million acres, and which lasted until 2009.

The Impacted Areas

The center squared-off area on the map represents the land identified in the 1882 Executive Order, with the dark red color representing the Hopi Reservation including the Hopi Partitioned Lands. The orange area on the western side of the map represents the area impacted by the Bennett Freeze. (See “Detail” 1.)

Navajo-Hopi Land Commission Office > History https://nhlco.navajo-nsn.gov/History

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