Call for Papers – Indigenous Environmental Rights and Tribal Environmental Regulation

William Mitchell Law Review, Vol. 41, Issue 2 (Spring 2015)

The William Mitchell Law Review is dedicating an issue to environmental justice issues, with a focus on indigenous rights to land and natural resources. The issue will be published in March 2015. Confirmed article topics so far cover tribal groundwater rights, EPA jurisdiction over off-reservation Indian lands, and mechanisms for tribal adaptation to climate change. The law review invites submissions that would support this overall theme of indigenous environmental justice and tribal environmental regulation.

Founded in 1974, the William Mitchell Law Review publishes timely articles of regional, national and international interest for legal practitioners, scholars, and lawmakers. Judges throughout the United States regularly cite the Law Review in their opinions. Academic journals, textbooks, and treatises frequently cite the Law Review as well. Due to the rising prominence of William Mitchell’s Indian law program, the Law Review is increasingly becoming a resource for articles relevant to Indian country.

Submissions may take the form of short commentaries or full-length law review articles. If you are interested in submitting an article, please email your submission to melissa.lorentz@wmitchell.edu by Friday, September 12th.

American Indian Law Journal (Seattle Law) Call for Papers

The American Indian Law Journal, published by the Seattle University School of Law, is currently accepting submissions for potential publication in the spring issue.  The American Indian Law Journal serves as a vital online resource providing high quality articles on issues relevant to Indian law practitioners and scholars across the country. The deadline for submissions for the spring issue is December 15, 2014. The editing process for publication begins soon after this date.

The American Indian Law Journal accepts articles and abstracts for consideration from students, practitioners, and law school faculty members.  For more information or to submit an article, please contact Jillian Held, Content Editor, at heldj@seattleu.edu.

AALS Indian Law Section Call for Papers

Call for Papers for the AALS Annual Meeting

Friday, January 2 – Monday, January 5, 2015, Washington DC

The AALS Indian Nations and Indigenous Peoples Section invites submissions on the topic “Bay Mills and the Future of Sovereign Immunity” for the Section’s 2015 AALS conference panel. Please submit abstracts (preferred to received full papers) to the Section Chair, Alex Pearl, at alex.pearl@ttu.edu by August 1, 2014. We anticipate interpreting the topic broadly, so please submit if you are doing work related to this concept. The Section Executive Committee will inform you if you have been chosen to be on the panel by September 1, 2015 so that you will know in time for the Spring Law Review submission cycle.

American Indian Law Journal CFP

The American Indian Law Journal, published by the Seattle University School of Law, is currently accepting submissions for potential publication in the fall and spring issues.  The American Indian Law Journal serves as a vital online resource providing high quality articles on issues relevant to Indian law practitioners and scholars across the country. The deadline for submissions for the fall issue is August 31, 2014.  Our staff begins the editing process in mid-September, with publication occurring in November. Articles considered for publication in the spring issue must be submitted no later than December 15, 2014.

The American Indian Law Journal accepts articles and abstracts for consideration from students, practitioners, and law school faculty members.  For more information or to submit an article, please contact Jillian Held, Content Editor, at heldj@seattleu.edu.

 

Univ. of Oregon: Alternative Sovereignties CFP — Dec. 1 Deadline

Here:

Alternative Sovereignties_CallforPapers

Conference website here.

Call for Papers: 2014 Native American Literature Symposium

15th NATIVE AMERICAN LITERATURE SYMPOSIUM

March 27-29, 2014

Mystic Lake Casino Hotel

Minneapolis, MN

MANY VOICES, ONE CENTER

Call for Proposals

DEADLINE: November 25, 2013

With literature as a crossroads where many forms of knowledge meet—art, history, politics, science, religion, film, cultural studies—we welcome once again spirited participation on all aspects of Native American studies. We invite proposals for individual papers, panel discussions, readings, exhibits, demonstrations, and workshops.  We especially encourage presentations and panels on teaching children’s and young adult literature by indigenous writers.

Scheduled speakers include Eric Gansworth who just published a young adult novel, If I Ever Get Out of Here, and First Nations Manitoba writers Duncan Mercredi, Katherena Vermette, and Rosanna Deerchild whose work appears in Manitowapow.

Continue reading

Indigenous Law Journal Call for Submissions

Here (PDF):

Call_for_Submissions_Fall_2013

 

American Indian Law Journal Call for Papers

The American Indian Law Journal, published by the Seattle University School of Law, is currently accepting submissions for potential publication in the fall and spring issues.  The American Indian Law Journal serves as a vital online resource providing high quality articles on issues relevant to Indian law practitioners and scholars across the country. The deadline for submissions for the fall issue is Wednesday September 4, 2013.  Our staff begins the editing process in mid-September, with publication occurring just after Thanksgiving. Articles considered for publication in the spring issue must be submitted no later than Wednesday February 5, 2014.

The American Indian Law Journal accepts articles and abstracts for consideration from students, practitioners, and law school faculty members.  For more information or to submit an article, please contact MJ McCallum, Content Editor, at mccallu5@seattleu.edu.  Past issues of the American Indian Law Journal are available at:

Spring Issue Volume I Issue II  

Fall Issue Volume I Issue I

We look forward to your submissions.

The American Indian Law Journal Editorial Board.

Call for Papers — Univ. of Oregon — Alternative Sovereignties

Conference Proposal: Alternative Sovereignties

Call For Papers

“Alternative Sovereignties: Decolonization Through Indigenous Vision and Struggle”

To be held at the University of Oregon, May 9, 2014.

The concept of “sovereignty” as both an international political norm and expression of cultural distinctiveness and political autonomy is central to American Indian and First Nations discourse in the United States and Canada. Yet this language is often an imperfect reflection of the goals that tribal nations seek to pursue, suggesting rigid political and social boundaries around and within indigenous nations. This stands in stark contrast to political relationships based in tribal epistemologies that acknowledge social flexibility, interdependence, reciprocity and non-coercive, respectful relationships between and within national communities.

This conference will explore both “alternative sovereignties” and “alternatives to sovereignty” that might better meet the political, cultural and social aspirations of American Indian and First Nations communities. We are especially interested in the relationship between vision and struggle. “Vision” theorizes alternative forms of sovereignty that might better reflect the social and political goals of American Indian and First Nations. “Struggle” interrogates the rhetorical, representational and discursive strategies necessary to pursue these visions within adversarial cultural and political environments still defined by colonial power.

Potential questions for investigation the following: What might visions of “alternative sovereignties” or “alternative to sovereignty” look like? What values, hopes and aspirations would they express? In what ways do such visions align or exist in tension with contemporary expressions of the nation, sovereignty, self-determination and human rights both in Indian Country and beyond? What forms of contemporary political and social struggle will best allow Native peoples to develop and advance tribal visions that might substantively revise or intervene in non-tribal fields of power and knowledge? Finally, what are the theoretical and practical relationships between “vision” and “struggle,” and what role does Indigenous cultural and intellectual production serve in advancing these efforts? Reflecting the interdisciplinarity of Native Studies, the conference is committed to conversation across historical periods and academic and institutional boundaries, including literature, law, philosophy, cultural studies, political science, education, anthropology, history and the arts.

Please send brief proposals of no more than 300 words to alternative.sovereignties@gmail.com by September 1, 2013. Also include brief biographical information, including for example academic affiliation, primary area of research, and relevant experience. Applications from the broader Northwest or dealing with issues relevant to Northwest indigenous nations are especially welcomed. For questions, please contact the conference organizers at the address above.

AALS Indian Nations and Indigenous Peoples Section Call for Papers

Indian Nations and Indigenous Peoples Section of the AALS

Call for Papers for the AALS Annual Meeting

New York City, NY, Jan. 2-5, 2014

The AALS Indian Nations and Indigenous Peoples Section invites submissions on the topic “The Relationship Between Indian Law and Tribal Law” for the Section’s 2014 AALS conference panel. The American Indian Law Review has agreed to publish selected papers associated with this call (the Law Review of course reserves the final publication decision). Please submit full papers, not just abstracts, to the Section Chair, Ezra Rosser, at erosser@wcl.american.edu, by August 1, 2013. We anticipate interpreting the topic broadly, so please submit if you are doing work related to this year’s topic! The Section Executive Committee (in connection with the Law Review) will inform you if you have been chosen to be on the panel by August 14, 2013 so that you will know in time for the Spring Law Review submission cycle.