In this article, the Author undertakes a law and literature approach to a major Indian law problem: understanding the losses of allotment. Allotment was a mid 19th - early 20th century federal legislative program to take large tracts of land owned by Indian tribes, allocate smaller parcels to individual Indians, and sell off the rest to non-Indians. The idea was that Indians would abandon traditional patterns of subsistence to become American-style farmers, and great tracts of land would be freed up for the advance of white settlement. A key component of the federal government\u27s larger project of assimilating Indians into mainstream society, allotment was devastating for Indian people who suffered incredible losses of land, economic live...
American Indian nations seldom brought lawsuits to enforce their rights prior to the 1960s but have ...
The General Allotment Act of 1887 was constructed as a solution to the obstacles that hindered weste...
Article published in the American University Journal of Gender, Social Policy & the Law
In this article, the Author undertakes a law and literature approach to a major Indian law problem: ...
“Stories in Severalty: Allotment and Indigenous Modernisms” examines Indigenous engagements with the...
During the allotment era, the federal government took land from tribes and parceled some of it out t...
The legacies of allotment on reservations—fractionated heirship and dispossession most notably—have ...
The division of Native American reservations into individually owned parcels was an unquestionable d...
Indian land claims have long been a foundational and fundamental subject of American law. Indians an...
Understanding the significance of the General Allotment Act of 1887 (Dawes Act) is central to any ra...
Indian land is a topic of great interest. Land has traditionally been the most important issue in I...
Louise Erdrich’s novel Tracks deals with the years between 1912 and 1919, when the North Dakota Chip...
This article evaluates the phenomenon of Indian ranching from its rise in the late nineteenth centur...
Part I of this article examines three older Supreme Court decisions, the cases that form the backdro...
This Article proposes a theory of real property and peoplehood in which lands essential to the ident...
American Indian nations seldom brought lawsuits to enforce their rights prior to the 1960s but have ...
The General Allotment Act of 1887 was constructed as a solution to the obstacles that hindered weste...
Article published in the American University Journal of Gender, Social Policy & the Law
In this article, the Author undertakes a law and literature approach to a major Indian law problem: ...
“Stories in Severalty: Allotment and Indigenous Modernisms” examines Indigenous engagements with the...
During the allotment era, the federal government took land from tribes and parceled some of it out t...
The legacies of allotment on reservations—fractionated heirship and dispossession most notably—have ...
The division of Native American reservations into individually owned parcels was an unquestionable d...
Indian land claims have long been a foundational and fundamental subject of American law. Indians an...
Understanding the significance of the General Allotment Act of 1887 (Dawes Act) is central to any ra...
Indian land is a topic of great interest. Land has traditionally been the most important issue in I...
Louise Erdrich’s novel Tracks deals with the years between 1912 and 1919, when the North Dakota Chip...
This article evaluates the phenomenon of Indian ranching from its rise in the late nineteenth centur...
Part I of this article examines three older Supreme Court decisions, the cases that form the backdro...
This Article proposes a theory of real property and peoplehood in which lands essential to the ident...
American Indian nations seldom brought lawsuits to enforce their rights prior to the 1960s but have ...
The General Allotment Act of 1887 was constructed as a solution to the obstacles that hindered weste...
Article published in the American University Journal of Gender, Social Policy & the Law