This article considers the effects of the operations of myth and metaphor on law through a comparison of a United States Supreme Court decision and a novel that deal with the contested trans-racial adoption of an American Indian child. It argues that the United States founding myth of Manifest Destiny—of the divinely ordained fate of the continent to host a (white) Christian state—is determinative of the way in which legal decisions regarding American Indians are made. The myth of Manifest Destiny contains a metaphor of vanished American Indians, such that contemporary American Indians are rendered nearly invisible and whose existence is not easily absorbed into the working of the American legal system. The American Indian Child Welfare Act...
This article presents the major impact of implemented U.S. Indian policies on the lives of American ...
This Article proposes a theory of real property and peoplehood in which lands essential to the ident...
On June 25, 2013, the Supreme Court decided Adoptive Couple v. Baby Girl, holding that the Indian Ch...
The debate over which legal Indigenous Peoples should govern Native American political power and pro...
The myth of abandoned children of immigrants and Indigenous folk forms multicultural families throug...
I don\u27t know my own culture, . . . I am going to need your help in understanding . . . . Teach me...
"Indigeneity at the Crossroads of American Studies." Published as a special joint issue with America...
Part I of this article examines three older Supreme Court decisions, the cases that form the backdro...
This article analyzes the complex interplay between adoption (traditionally a matter reserved to sta...
[F]rom the very moment the general government came into existence to this time, it has exercised its...
Starting with Chief Justice John Marshall and continuing through to the present Supreme Court, the s...
This exploration reveals that tribes were not as anomalous as the Supreme Court of the United States...
The media has the ability to shape public opinion and influence policy direction. The case of Adopti...
In 1846, the Supreme Court held in United States v. Rogers that a white man who had become a citizen...
This article describes the profound changes to American Indian kinship and social structures caused ...
This article presents the major impact of implemented U.S. Indian policies on the lives of American ...
This Article proposes a theory of real property and peoplehood in which lands essential to the ident...
On June 25, 2013, the Supreme Court decided Adoptive Couple v. Baby Girl, holding that the Indian Ch...
The debate over which legal Indigenous Peoples should govern Native American political power and pro...
The myth of abandoned children of immigrants and Indigenous folk forms multicultural families throug...
I don\u27t know my own culture, . . . I am going to need your help in understanding . . . . Teach me...
"Indigeneity at the Crossroads of American Studies." Published as a special joint issue with America...
Part I of this article examines three older Supreme Court decisions, the cases that form the backdro...
This article analyzes the complex interplay between adoption (traditionally a matter reserved to sta...
[F]rom the very moment the general government came into existence to this time, it has exercised its...
Starting with Chief Justice John Marshall and continuing through to the present Supreme Court, the s...
This exploration reveals that tribes were not as anomalous as the Supreme Court of the United States...
The media has the ability to shape public opinion and influence policy direction. The case of Adopti...
In 1846, the Supreme Court held in United States v. Rogers that a white man who had become a citizen...
This article describes the profound changes to American Indian kinship and social structures caused ...
This article presents the major impact of implemented U.S. Indian policies on the lives of American ...
This Article proposes a theory of real property and peoplehood in which lands essential to the ident...
On June 25, 2013, the Supreme Court decided Adoptive Couple v. Baby Girl, holding that the Indian Ch...