AltaMira Press
Pages: 328
Trim: 6½ x 9⅛
978-0-7619-9060-4 • Hardback • January 1999 • $138.00 • (£106.00) - Currently out of stock. Copies will arrive soon.
978-0-7619-9061-1 • Paperback • January 1999 • $53.00 • (£41.00)
978-0-585-18994-9 • eBook • January 2000 • $50.00 • (£38.00)
Troy R. Johnson is an Associate Professor of American Indian Studies at California State University, Long Beach.
chapter 1 Part I: Nationalism and Sovereignty
chapter 2 1. Ward Churchill, The Tragedy and the Travesty: The Subversion of Indigenous Sovereignty in North America
chapter 3 2. Arif Dirlik, The Past as Legacy and Project: Postcolonial Criticism in the Perspective of Indigenous Historicism
chapter 4 Part II: International Indigenous Rights
chapter 5 3. Stephen V. Quesenberry, Recent United Nations Initiatives Concerning the Rights of Indigenous Peoples
chapter 6 4. Fae L. Korsmo, Claiming Memory in British Columbia: Aboriginal Rights and the State
chapter 7 Part III: Economic Development
chapter 8 5. Ronald L. Trosper, Traditional American Indian Economic Policy
chapter 9 6. Gary C. Anders, Indian Gaming: Financial and Regulatory Issues
chapter 10 Part IV: Law and Justice
chapter 11 7. Donald E. Green, The Contextual Nature of American Indian Criminality
chapter 12 8. Carole Goldberg, Public Law 280 and the Problem of `Lawlessness' in Indian Country
chapter 13 Part V: Repartriation
chapter 14 9. Robert M. Peregoy, Nebraska's Landmark Repatriation Law: A Study of Cross-Cultural Conflict and Resolution
chapter 15 10. Carole Goldberg, Acknowledging the Repatriation Claims of Unacknowledged California Tribes
chapter 16 Part VI: Activism
chapter 17 11. Troy Johnson, Duane Champagne, and Joane Nagel, American Indian Activism and Transformation: Lessons from Alcatraz
chapter 18 Index
chapter 19 Acknowledgments
chapter 20 About the Editor
Although there are several anthropological textbooks on Native Americans, a collection discussing contemporary sociological issues for classroom use is sorely missing. Champagne and Johnson are addressing this lack. In their two-volume collection of essays, the editors are providing a broad range of topics facing Native American communities at this time.
— Annette Kuhlman, (University of Wisconsin, Baraboo); Journal Of Ethnic History
This is an excellent addition to the literature on Native American politics, useful in undergraduate courses, as well as, one would hope, to the many academics in political science and elsewhere whose knowledge of the subject is scant.
— Frank Wilmer, (Montana State University); Ethnic and Racial Studies
These two volumes (with Contemporary Native American Cultural Issues, ed Champagne) succeed in conveying the complexity of Native American needs and the cultural context in which they are embedded.
— Niels W. Braroe, (Massachusetts Institute of Technology); Practicing Anthropology