In a number of recent controversies, from sports teams’ use of Indian mascots to the federal government’s desecration of sacred sites, American Indians have lodged charges of “cultural appropriation” or the unauthorized use by members of one group of the cultural expressions and resources of another. While these and other incidents make contemporary headlines, American Indians often experience these claims within a historical and continuing experience of dispossession. For hundreds of years, the U.S. legal system has sanctioned the taking and destruction of Indian lands, artifacts, bodies, religions, identities, and beliefs, all toward the project of conquest and colonization. Indian resources have been devalued by the law and made availabl...
This paper examines the challenge of protecting American Indian sacred sites located on federal publ...
To date, legal efforts to eradicate the use of Native American iconography in American sports have f...
Globalization of Intellectual Property Rights (IPRs) has posed an unprecedented threat to the existe...
In a number of recent controversies, from sports teams’ use of Indian mascots to the federal governm...
Indigenous Peoples across the world are calling on nation-states to “decolonize” laws, structures, a...
This article provides an introduction to the unique conflicts over American Indian cultural objects....
This Article responds to an emerging view, in scholarship and popular society, that it is normativel...
This Article proposes a theory of real property and peoplehood in which lands essential to the ident...
Cultural resources can be defined as the tangible and intangible effects of an individual or group ...
Although the Free Exercise Clause prohibits governmental interference with religion, American Indian...
Incidents involving theft of indigenous peoples\u27 traditional knowledge and the blatant appropriat...
In the debate about indigenous cultural property, the Native American Graves Protection and Repatria...
How does racism work in American Indian law and policy? Scholarship on the subject has too often ass...
In this article we reject the premise that race is merely an independent variable when studying the ...
This paper examines the challenge of protecting American Indian sacred sites located on federal publ...
To date, legal efforts to eradicate the use of Native American iconography in American sports have f...
Globalization of Intellectual Property Rights (IPRs) has posed an unprecedented threat to the existe...
In a number of recent controversies, from sports teams’ use of Indian mascots to the federal governm...
Indigenous Peoples across the world are calling on nation-states to “decolonize” laws, structures, a...
This article provides an introduction to the unique conflicts over American Indian cultural objects....
This Article responds to an emerging view, in scholarship and popular society, that it is normativel...
This Article proposes a theory of real property and peoplehood in which lands essential to the ident...
Cultural resources can be defined as the tangible and intangible effects of an individual or group ...
Although the Free Exercise Clause prohibits governmental interference with religion, American Indian...
Incidents involving theft of indigenous peoples\u27 traditional knowledge and the blatant appropriat...
In the debate about indigenous cultural property, the Native American Graves Protection and Repatria...
How does racism work in American Indian law and policy? Scholarship on the subject has too often ass...
In this article we reject the premise that race is merely an independent variable when studying the ...
This paper examines the challenge of protecting American Indian sacred sites located on federal publ...
To date, legal efforts to eradicate the use of Native American iconography in American sports have f...
Globalization of Intellectual Property Rights (IPRs) has posed an unprecedented threat to the existe...