Additional details below the fold:
Symposia
MSU International Law Review Call for Papers: Battle for the North — The Next Great Conflict
David Getches Symposium at CU Law School
David Getches Symposium
April 26th & April 27th, 2012 5:30 p.m. – 6:45 p.m. April 26th 8:00 a.m. – 5 p.m. April 27th
Wolf Law Building, Wittemyer Courtroom
On Thursday and Friday, April 26-27th, the Law School will host a Symposium in Honor of David H. Getches, beloved Dean, colleague, professor, and public servant, who passed away last summer. The Symposium will celebrate David’s life, especially his trailblazing scholarship, and will begin Thursday evening, with a lecture celebrating Dean Getches’s life by Distinguished Professor Charles Wilkinson. On Friday, the very best in the fields of Natural Resources, Water, and American Indian Law will gather to reflect on and celebrate Dean Getches’s scholarly legacy. Speakers include Professor John Leshy, Senator Tim Wirth, and John Echohawk, Executive Director of the Native American Rights Fund.
Please RSVP here by April 19, 2012.
Wisconsin ILSA 2012 Annual Program
Gonzaga Symposium on Public Defense in Indian Country
Here:
Symposium on Public Defense in Indian Country
Date:
Friday, March 23, 2012
Time:
8:00 a.m. – 4:00 p.m.
Location:
Gonzaga University School of Law
Room 226
Details:
Click here for brochure, and here for the speakers’ biographies. Continue reading
Video Links to 8th Annual Haudenosaunee Conference
Here:
8th Haudenosaunee Conference
LAND, LACHES & LEGAL BATTLES
Reclaiming Our Indigenous Territories
November 18 & 19, 2011
Welcome Video 1: Carrie Garrow, Christian Day
Thanksgiving Address_Video 2: Sid Hill
Video 3: Carrie Garrow
The Tangled Web of New York’s History–Laws and Lies
Video 4: Meghan McCume (video forthcoming)
Influencing Public Opinion and Framing Land Claim Opposition: The Reciprocal Relationship between Federal Indian Law and Anti-Indian Movements
Video 5: Lindsay Robertson
The Tortured History of the Discovery Doctrine in the Marshall Court
Video 6: Kathryn Fort
New Laches–A History
Video 7: Oren Lyons
Video 8: Legal Frontlines_Joe Heath, Curtis Berkey
The Status of Land Claims/Rights Cases
Video 9: Matthew Fletcher
National Implications of Sherrill
Video 10: Douglas Sanderson
Against Supersession
Video 11: Julie Ann Cavanaugh-Bill
Using a Human Rights Framework to Educate, Empower and Enforce Indigenous Rights
American Indian Law Center: The First Thirteen
Lewis & Clark Law Review Indian Law Symposium
Here:
SYMPOSIUM
The Future of International Law in Indigenous Affairs:The Doctrine of Discovery, the United Nations, and the Organization of American States
THE INTERNATIONAL LAW OF COLONIALISM: A COMPARATIVE ANALYSIS
Robert J. Miller
15 Lewis & Clark L. Rev. 847 (2011)
The majority of the non-European world was colonized under an international law that is known as the Doctrine of Discovery. Under this legal principle, European countries claimed superior rights over Indigenous nations. When European explorers planted flags and religious symbols in the lands of native peoples, they were making legal claims of ownership and domination over the lands, assets, and peoples they had “discovered.” These claims were justified by racial, ethnocentric, and religious ideas of the alleged superiority of European Christians. This Article examines the application of Discovery by Spain, Portugal, and England in the settler societies of Australia, Brazil, Canada, Chile, New Zealand, and the United States. The comparative law analysis used in this Article demonstrates that these three colonizing countries applied the elements of the Doctrine in nearly identical ways against Indigenous peoples. Furthermore, the six settler societies analyzed here continue to apply this law today to restrict the human, property, and sovereign rights of Indigenous nations and peoples. This Article concludes that basic fairness and a restoration of the self-determination rights of Indigenous peoples mandates that these countries work to remove the vestiges of the Doctrine of Discovery from their modern day laws and policies.
RECONCEPTUALIZING TRIBAL RIGHTS: CAN SELF-DETERMINATION BE ACTUALIZED WITHIN THE U.S. CONSTITUTIONAL STRUCTURE?
Rebecca Tsosie
15 Lewis & Clark L. Rev. 923 (2011) Continue reading
Idaho Law School Indian Law Conference on Tribal Courts
Looks like a great program!
Agenda here.
American Indian Law Review Sovereignty and Identity Symposium — March 1, 2012 — Agenda
Here is the agenda:




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