Across North America, small Indigenous nations seized the unique legal conditions created by imperial transitions to defend territory as state-sanctioned property. The 1763 Treaty of Paris, the 1803 Louisiana Purchase, and the 1848 Treaty of Guadalupe Hidalgo transferred sovereignty from French, Spanish, and Mexican regimes that incorporated forms of indigenous landholding to British and U.S. regimes that sought to exclude them. Yet these treaties also required new administrations to uphold pre-existing property in newly acquired territories. Through three case studies—Abenakis and Sokokis in British Quebec after 1763, Tunicas and Chitimachas in American Louisiana after 1803, and Tongva and Tataviam peoples in U.S. California after 1848—thi...
This Article tells an untold history of the American title registry—a colonial bureaucratic innovati...
The aim of this short book is to foreground Native American conceptions of sovereignty and power in ...
Beginning in the mid-seventeenth century, colonial projects in southern New England sponsored dozens...
Across North America, small Indigenous nations seized the unique legal conditions created by imperia...
This dissertation analyzes the changing political relationships between European agents of empire, w...
In accordance with international law principles the French generally considered indigenous peoples ...
Before Europeans arrived in what is now known as the United States, over 600 diverse Native nations ...
The expansion of the United States at the expense of Native Americans during the nineteenth century ...
In colonial America, there was one resource that settlers were thirsty for and only Native Americans...
This study focuses upon contact between British-Canadian, Aboriginal and Mennonite colonists' syste...
This dissertation analyzes tensions between Indigenous and Canadian authority over land and governan...
Northern Plains Borders and the People in Between is a transnational history of colonialism and mixe...
430 pagesIndigenous and Afro-descendant peoples throughout Latin America have mobilized to demand th...
“Louisiana Purchases” challenges the common reduction of the US-Indian treaty system to a cycle of c...
“A Negotiated Possession: Law, Race, and Subjecthood in the Ceded Islands,” begins in 1763 when the ...
This Article tells an untold history of the American title registry—a colonial bureaucratic innovati...
The aim of this short book is to foreground Native American conceptions of sovereignty and power in ...
Beginning in the mid-seventeenth century, colonial projects in southern New England sponsored dozens...
Across North America, small Indigenous nations seized the unique legal conditions created by imperia...
This dissertation analyzes the changing political relationships between European agents of empire, w...
In accordance with international law principles the French generally considered indigenous peoples ...
Before Europeans arrived in what is now known as the United States, over 600 diverse Native nations ...
The expansion of the United States at the expense of Native Americans during the nineteenth century ...
In colonial America, there was one resource that settlers were thirsty for and only Native Americans...
This study focuses upon contact between British-Canadian, Aboriginal and Mennonite colonists' syste...
This dissertation analyzes tensions between Indigenous and Canadian authority over land and governan...
Northern Plains Borders and the People in Between is a transnational history of colonialism and mixe...
430 pagesIndigenous and Afro-descendant peoples throughout Latin America have mobilized to demand th...
“Louisiana Purchases” challenges the common reduction of the US-Indian treaty system to a cycle of c...
“A Negotiated Possession: Law, Race, and Subjecthood in the Ceded Islands,” begins in 1763 when the ...
This Article tells an untold history of the American title registry—a colonial bureaucratic innovati...
The aim of this short book is to foreground Native American conceptions of sovereignty and power in ...
Beginning in the mid-seventeenth century, colonial projects in southern New England sponsored dozens...