Here. An excerpt:
In this updated edition of his landmark 1983 work, Stephen L. Pevar continues his decades-long effort to distill the intricacies of Indian law into an easy-to-understand format that will help Indian tribes vindicate their rights and their sovereignty. Mr. Pevar concisely explains important concepts in Indian law through a question-andanswer format, drawing on history, case law, legal scholarship, and sociology to explain not only what the state of Indian law is, but also why it has come to be that way, taking into account major recent developments in Indian law. While Mr. Pevar is proud of the progress Indian civil rights activists have made since the “termination era” of 1953 to 1968, which he describes in scathing terms, he also expresses fear for the future of Indian rights and sovereignty, which he views as threatened by a conservative Supreme Court and aggressive federal legislators (pp. 11–15). The book contains a number of useful maps, lists, and charts, as well as the texts of major Indian law statutes and over 130 pages of helpful footnotes. Mr. Pevar’s work will be of interest to legal scholars, historians, Indian law litigators, and Indian rights activists alike.
More details about Stephen’s book here.