"Indigeneity at the Crossroads of American Studies." Published as a special joint issue with American Studies, Volume 46, No. 3/4, Fall 2005
Over the past 500 years, American Indians have been subjected to inequalities through the United Sta...
In 1976, a study by the Judicial Services Division of the Bureau of Indian Affairs concluded that in...
This Note analyzes the primary conflicts among the order of the District Court for the District of N...
"Indigeneity at the Crossroads of American Studies." Published as a special joint issue with America...
Eleven federally recognized Indian tribes are located in Wisconsin. When civil disputes arise betwee...
No other branch of any government at any level in the United States faces the same sorts of unique c...
The Indigenous nations of the United States have long been subject to federal policy. Since the Civi...
American Indian law commonly describes the body of law by which the United States government regulat...
For a presentation, I read the eighty-five cases published in the Indian Law Reporter during 1996. I...
INTRODUCTION The judicial function is no stranger to Native Americans. Prior to their contact with E...
The law of Indian tribes is under attack by non-Indians, with the most strident and hostile attacks ...
The law of Indian tribes is under attack by non-Indians, with the most strident and hostile attacks ...
This paper is part of a call for a paradigm-shifting re-examination by Indian tribes and Indian peop...
The thesis of this article is that by examining Federal Indian Law one better understands that the A...
This article is intended to rebut several of Mr. Brakel\u27s key assertions and to emphasize the wel...
Over the past 500 years, American Indians have been subjected to inequalities through the United Sta...
In 1976, a study by the Judicial Services Division of the Bureau of Indian Affairs concluded that in...
This Note analyzes the primary conflicts among the order of the District Court for the District of N...
"Indigeneity at the Crossroads of American Studies." Published as a special joint issue with America...
Eleven federally recognized Indian tribes are located in Wisconsin. When civil disputes arise betwee...
No other branch of any government at any level in the United States faces the same sorts of unique c...
The Indigenous nations of the United States have long been subject to federal policy. Since the Civi...
American Indian law commonly describes the body of law by which the United States government regulat...
For a presentation, I read the eighty-five cases published in the Indian Law Reporter during 1996. I...
INTRODUCTION The judicial function is no stranger to Native Americans. Prior to their contact with E...
The law of Indian tribes is under attack by non-Indians, with the most strident and hostile attacks ...
The law of Indian tribes is under attack by non-Indians, with the most strident and hostile attacks ...
This paper is part of a call for a paradigm-shifting re-examination by Indian tribes and Indian peop...
The thesis of this article is that by examining Federal Indian Law one better understands that the A...
This article is intended to rebut several of Mr. Brakel\u27s key assertions and to emphasize the wel...
Over the past 500 years, American Indians have been subjected to inequalities through the United Sta...
In 1976, a study by the Judicial Services Division of the Bureau of Indian Affairs concluded that in...
This Note analyzes the primary conflicts among the order of the District Court for the District of N...