American Indian Law Review to Publish Papers from MSU Conference “American Indian Law and Literature”

Here is a listing of the articles to be published in volume 33, no. 1:

  • From Hatuey to Che: Indigenous Cuba Without Indians and the U.N. Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples – Larry Catá Backer
  • “Channeling Thought”: The Legacy of Legal Fictions from 1823 – Jen Camden & Kathryn E. Fort
  • Interpretive Sovereignty: A Research Agenda – Kristen A. Carpenter
  • Crossover – Richard Delgado & Jean Stefancic
  • Red Leaves and the Dirty Ground: The Cannibalism of Law and Economics – Matthew L.M. Fletcher
  • Genealogy as Continuity: Explaining the Growing Tribal Preference for Descent Rules in Membership Governance in the United States – Kirsty Gover
  • Writing the Living Law: American Indian Literature as Legal Narrative – Amelia V. Katanski
  • How Lawyers Resolve Ethical Dilemmas: An Essay on James Welch’s The Indian Lawyer – Renee Newman Knake
  • Narrative Braids: Performing Racial Literacy – Margaret Montoya & Christine Zuni Cruz, interviewed by Gene Grant
  • At the Edge of Indian Law Scholarship: A Poem Instead of a Footnote – Frank Pommersheim