About Sovereign Continuity Project

About Sovereign Continuity Project

Sovereign Continuity Project is a living archive dedicated to tracing interrupted sovereignty, restoring lawful continuity, and holding space for descendant communities to preserve, interpret, and carry forward their own historical memory.

Many people inherit stories shaped by displacement, broken treaties, land loss, forced assimilation, fragmented records, and histories told from outside their own communities. Over generations, entire peoples have been separated from land, memory, governance, and the ability to define their own continuity.

This project exists to help reconnect those histories — through research, mapping, storytelling, archival work, and descendant memory — while exploring what restoration may require for future generations.

The goal is not only remembrance, but restoration.


What You’ll Find Here

Some histories were carefully preserved.

Others were fragmented across generations through broken treaties, displacement, forced assimilation, land loss, fractured records, and systems that separated communities from the ability to define their own continuity.

Sovereign Continuity Project exists to help reconnect those histories — and to explore what restoration may require moving forward.

Here you will find treaty research, land and allotment records, historical maps, descendant narratives, archival inquiry, and essays exploring interrupted sovereignty, lawful continuity, dispossession, restoration, and historical memory.

The purpose of this project is not only to preserve information, but to help descendant communities better understand the relationships between SOVEREIGNTY, INHERITANCE, MEMORY, LAND, and the generations that follow.


Who This Is For

This project is for descendants seeking to better understand histories connected to sovereignty, treaties, land relationships, dispossession, fragmented inheritance, and interrupted continuity across generations.

It is especially centered on people tracing continuity through historically recognized sovereign, legal, territorial, treaty, allotment, or land-based relationships that were altered, fragmented, or displaced over time.

Many communities inherited the consequences of those interruptions without inheriting full access to the records, language, or historical frameworks needed to fully understand them.

Sovereign Continuity Project exists to help hold space for that reconstruction — collectively, responsibly, and with future generations in mind.


A Note on Restoration

Restoration begins with recognizing that some histories were not simply forgotten.

They were interrupted.

Across generations, many communities experienced broken treaty relationships, displacement from land, fractured inheritance, forced assimilation, altered governance, and the gradual separation of people from the records, memory, and continuity that once helped define them.

The consequences of those interruptions did not remain in the past. They continued through families, institutions, economies, historical narratives, and the uneven distribution of stability, land, resources, and recognition across generations.

Sovereign Continuity Project exists to help document those realities carefully and responsibly while creating space for descendant communities to participate in the preservation, interpretation, and restoration of their own continuity.

Restoration may take many forms — historical recovery, archival reconstruction, cultural continuity, lawful analysis, reparative frameworks, land-based restoration, institutional rebuilding, and future generations reclaiming the ability to define themselves within histories that were never fully resolved.

This project does not begin from the assumption that continuity is gone.

It begins from the belief that continuity can still be recognized, protected, and carried forward.