Abstract This article examines the implications of the choice made by the Republic of Lakotah to rely on international treaty law rather than the exercise of self-determination in declaring its independence from the United States in 2007 and 2010. States have long expressed resistance towards the granting of the principle of self-determination to minorities and indigenous groups. States fear that granting this right would lead to groups taking action to secede from the state. This article considers whether state fears of secession are realistic, and whether there is, in fact, a credible claim to external self-determination under international law for indigenous groups, or whether state fears of indigenous self-determination are grounded in...
For the last thirty years the Supreme Court has been adjusting the boundaries of American Indian tri...
The four articles in this issue all contribute to the dialogue surrounding the intersection of indig...
The article examines the re-emergence of indigenous rights in contemporary international law in the ...
This article examines the implications of the choice made by the Republic of Lakotah to rely on inte...
States have long expressed some resistance towards granting the right of self-determination to ident...
This article focuses on the concept of self-determination as it applies to indigenous peoples in gen...
States have long expressed some resistance towards granting the right of self-determination to ident...
In this article I examine selective dimensions of the nexus among the right to self-determination, h...
States have long expressed some resistance towards granting the right of self-determination to iden...
For much of the 19th and 20th Centuries, the international community resisted the notion of indigeno...
This Article discusses, in Part II, the notion of self-determination, its history, and its recent ap...
The Indigenous nations of the United States have long been subject to federal policy. Since the Civi...
This article presents a survey of both the rhetoric and applications of international law addressing...
Review of David J. Carlson. Imagining Sovereignty: Self-Determination in American Indian Law and Lit...
This Article argues that the meaningful revitalization of Indigenous nations depends upon engaging i...
For the last thirty years the Supreme Court has been adjusting the boundaries of American Indian tri...
The four articles in this issue all contribute to the dialogue surrounding the intersection of indig...
The article examines the re-emergence of indigenous rights in contemporary international law in the ...
This article examines the implications of the choice made by the Republic of Lakotah to rely on inte...
States have long expressed some resistance towards granting the right of self-determination to ident...
This article focuses on the concept of self-determination as it applies to indigenous peoples in gen...
States have long expressed some resistance towards granting the right of self-determination to ident...
In this article I examine selective dimensions of the nexus among the right to self-determination, h...
States have long expressed some resistance towards granting the right of self-determination to iden...
For much of the 19th and 20th Centuries, the international community resisted the notion of indigeno...
This Article discusses, in Part II, the notion of self-determination, its history, and its recent ap...
The Indigenous nations of the United States have long been subject to federal policy. Since the Civi...
This article presents a survey of both the rhetoric and applications of international law addressing...
Review of David J. Carlson. Imagining Sovereignty: Self-Determination in American Indian Law and Lit...
This Article argues that the meaningful revitalization of Indigenous nations depends upon engaging i...
For the last thirty years the Supreme Court has been adjusting the boundaries of American Indian tri...
The four articles in this issue all contribute to the dialogue surrounding the intersection of indig...
The article examines the re-emergence of indigenous rights in contemporary international law in the ...