From PSU College of Education website:
UNIVERSITY PARK, Pa. – American Indian law and policy expertMatthew Fletcher will visit Penn State Law on September 19 to present “American Indian Education: Counternarratives in Racism, Struggle, and the Law.” Fletcher is the chief editor of Turtle Talk, the leading law blog on American Indian law and policy.
“Professor Fletcher’s talk will help people understand the challenges inherent in Indian education and will appeal especially to those with an interest in educational leadership and issues related to the education of American Indian and Alaska Native students,” said Susan Faircloth, associate professor of education at Penn State.
Faircloth is the director of Penn State’s American Indian Leadership Program, the nation’s oldest continuously operating education leadership program for American Indians and Alaska Natives. Her research focuses on the overrepresentation of American Indian and Alaska Native students in special education programs and services.
“This event will challenge participants to think about the importance of tribal sovereignty to American Indian education,” said Penn State Law Professor Carla Pratt, who studies both Indian law and the experience of minorities in law school and the legal profession.
Matthew L.M. Fletcher is professor of law at Michigan State University College of Law and director of the Indigenous Law and Policy Center. He is the chief justice of the Poarch Band of Creek Indians Supreme Court and also sits as an appellate judge for the Pokagon Band of Potawatomi Indians, the Hoopa Valley Tribe, and the Nottawaseppi Huron Band of Potawatomi Indians. He is a member of the Grand Traverse Band of Ottawa and Chippewa Indians, located in Peshawbestown, Mich. In 2010, Fletcher was elected to the American Law Institute.
Fletcher recently published the sixth edition of Cases and Materials on Federal Indian Law with David Getches, Charles Wilkinson, and Robert Williams, and American Indian Tribal Law, the first casebook for law students on tribal law. His book, The Return of the Eagle: The Legal History of the Grand Traverse Band of Ottawa and Chippewa Indians, will be published later this year by Michigan State University Press. He is also the author of American Indian Education: Counternarratives in Racism, Struggle, and the Law (Routledge, 2008).
Fletcher’s talk is sponsored by the American Indian Leadership Program, the College of Education, and Penn State Law. His presentation begins at noon on September 19 in the auditorium of the Lewis Katz Building. The public is welcome.
Great ! I hope I was there to hear such an erudite scholar of Native Indian Law and Policy speak on such a important topic……His narratives indeed touch the very essense of the inherent challenges encountered by tribal law and provides us with viable intervention tools to negotiate and overcome such limitations. I was fortunate to have attended some of his previous talks and lectures during my Fulbright year in the US….and deeply cherish my long association with him.
Paramjyot Singh, M.A.,LL.M.
Fulbright Doctoral and Professional Research Fellow 2010-2011.
Indigenous Law and Policy Center,
Michigan State University.