PDF here: PevarRightsflier_freeshipping
Stephen Pevar’s Rights of Indians and Tribes — Fourth Edition — Signed Copies Available from the Author
PDF here: PevarRightsflier_freeshipping
PDF here: PevarRightsflier_freeshipping
While the publication date is still months away, it’s worth highlighting that Stephen Pevar is busy updating his important work, “The Rights of Indians and Tribes,” its fourth edition. Importantly, this edition will be published by Oxford University Press.
All of this is a very exciting development. My mother’s dogeared copy of the second edition was my introduction to the broad contours of federal Indian law.
Here is the flyer: Tribal Constitutionalism – Flyer
From the website:
Kirsty Gover examines the strategies adopted by tribes and states to deal with the new legal distinction between indigenous people (defined by settler governments) and tribal members (defined by tribal governments). She highlights the important fact that the two categories are imperfectly aligned. Many indigenous persons are not tribal members, and some tribal members are not legally indigenous. Should legal indigenous status be limited to persons enrolled in recognized tribes? What is to be done about the large and growing proportion of indigenous peoples who are not enrolled in a tribe, and do not live near their tribal territories? This book approaches these complex questions head-on.
Using tribal membership criteria as a starting point, this book provides a critical analysis of current political and sociolegal theories of tribalism and indigeneity, and draws on legal doctrine, policy, demographic data and tribal practice to provide a comparative evaluation of tribal membership governance in the western settler states.
This book presents new material and shines fresh light on the under-explored historical and legal evidence about the use of the doctrine of discovery in Australia, Canada, New Zealand and the United States.
Oxford University Press will publish Kirsty Gover’s “Tribal Constitutionalism: States, Tribes and the Governance of Membership” in December.
Here is the blurb:
Recognised tribes are increasingly prominent players in settler state governance, but in the wide-ranging debates about tribal self-governance, little has been said about tribal self-constitution.
Who are the members of tribes, and how are they chosen? Tribes in Canada, Australia, New Zealand and the United States are now obliged to adopt written constitutions as a condition of recognition, and to specify the criteria used to select members. This book presents findings from a comparative study of nearly eight hundred current and historic tribal constitutions, most of which are not in the public domain.
Kirsty Gover examines the strategies adopted by tribes and states to deal with the new legal distinction between indigenous people (defined by settler governments) and tribal members (defined by tribal governments). She highlights the important fact that the two categories are imperfectly aligned. Many indigenous persons are not tribal members, and some tribal members are not legally indigenous. Should legal indigenous status be limited to persons enrolled in recognized tribes? What is to be done about the large and growing proportion of indigenous peoples who are not enrolled in a tribe, and do not live near their tribal territories? This book approaches these complex questions head-on.
Using tribal membership criteria as a starting point, this book provides a critical analysis of current political and sociolegal theories of tribalism and indigeneity, and draws on legal doctrine, policy, demographic data and tribal practice to provide a comparative evaluation of tribal membership governance in the western settler states.
Here’s the link to the book, a collection of essays edited by Federico Lenzerini, and published by Oxford. And here are a few interesting chapters:
Gerald Torres, “Indigenous Peoples, Afro-Indigenous Peoples and Reparations”
David C. Williams, “In Praise of Guilt: How the Yearning for Moral Purity Blocks Reparations for Native Americans”
Sarah Krakoff and Kristen Carpenter, “Repairing Reparations in the American Indian Nation Context”
Reparations for Neglect of Indigenous Land Rights at the Intersection of Domestic and International Law — The Maya Cases”
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