This paper attempts to unpack questions at the intersections of race and sovereignty by analyzing two federal court cases involving Cherokee Freedmen and citizenship: Vann v. United States DOI and Cherokee Nation v. Nash
This article implements the framework of whiteness of property to articulate the ways in which holdi...
This Article explains a longstanding problem in federal Indian law. For two centuries, the U.S. Supr...
Courts address equal protection questions about the distinct legal treatment of American Indian trib...
This paper attempts to unpack questions at the intersections of race and sovereignty by analyzing tw...
This Article examines the Cherokee Freedmen controversy to assess whether law and biology can functi...
This Article addresses the Cherokee Nation and its historic conflict with the descendants of its for...
The appearance of Blacks in Native spaces affected the very structure of Indigenous lives during the...
The history of the Cherokee people with the advent of white settlers in North America is a sad one. ...
In 2011, the Cherokee Nation Supreme Court voted to exclude freedmen (descendants of former slaves) ...
In this article we reject the premise that race is merely an independent variable when studying the ...
The Cherokee Nation today faces the challenge of determining its citizenship criteria in the context...
In August 2011 the Cherokee Nation Supreme Court retracted Cherokee citizenship from approximately 2...
In 1846, the Supreme Court held in United States v. Rogers that a white man who had become a citizen...
This United States (US) Supreme Court case, submitted October 23, 1902 and decided December 1, 1902,...
Fay Yarbrough\u27s Race and the Cherokee Nation adds to recent literature, including Tiya Miles\u27s...
This article implements the framework of whiteness of property to articulate the ways in which holdi...
This Article explains a longstanding problem in federal Indian law. For two centuries, the U.S. Supr...
Courts address equal protection questions about the distinct legal treatment of American Indian trib...
This paper attempts to unpack questions at the intersections of race and sovereignty by analyzing tw...
This Article examines the Cherokee Freedmen controversy to assess whether law and biology can functi...
This Article addresses the Cherokee Nation and its historic conflict with the descendants of its for...
The appearance of Blacks in Native spaces affected the very structure of Indigenous lives during the...
The history of the Cherokee people with the advent of white settlers in North America is a sad one. ...
In 2011, the Cherokee Nation Supreme Court voted to exclude freedmen (descendants of former slaves) ...
In this article we reject the premise that race is merely an independent variable when studying the ...
The Cherokee Nation today faces the challenge of determining its citizenship criteria in the context...
In August 2011 the Cherokee Nation Supreme Court retracted Cherokee citizenship from approximately 2...
In 1846, the Supreme Court held in United States v. Rogers that a white man who had become a citizen...
This United States (US) Supreme Court case, submitted October 23, 1902 and decided December 1, 1902,...
Fay Yarbrough\u27s Race and the Cherokee Nation adds to recent literature, including Tiya Miles\u27s...
This article implements the framework of whiteness of property to articulate the ways in which holdi...
This Article explains a longstanding problem in federal Indian law. For two centuries, the U.S. Supr...
Courts address equal protection questions about the distinct legal treatment of American Indian trib...