Internment Camp, or Concentration Camp?
Historically, the term 'internment camp' has been used to describe places of temporary imprisonment, of which this certainly qualifies. The term 'concentration camp,' on the other hand, has been used to describe places designed for permanent imprisonment and/or execution. The differentiation is somewhat difficult to assign in the case of Fort Snelling. Though the camp was indeed only intended to be temporary, hundreds of people died from starvation, disease, and even acts of murder by surveillant soldiers within its confines.
How, then, should we refer to the camp as it was? It was a place where innocent people - non-combatants - were held, starved, and murdered simply because of the color of their skin. It was a place where the Dakota were forcibly placed, held in extreme concentration, and denied any form of rights. While they certainly were not being held for eventual extermination as in a Nazi Germany concentration camp, it would be very well possible to argue that, due to the lack of attention and help offered, they spent each day awaiting their death much the same. It is for this reason that we chose to use the phrase 'concentration camp' for this project.
For more information on this topic, we highly recommend visiting the Fort Snelling and Guantánamo: Corresponding Histories, Disparate Rememberings project completed by fellow students at the University of Minnesota in 2014.