The American Indian in Western Legal Thought

The American Indian in Western Legal Thought
Author: Robert A. Williams Jr.
Publisher: Oxford University Press
Total Pages: 365
Release: 1992-11-26
Genre: Law
ISBN: 0198021739

Exploring the history of contemporary legal thought on the rights and status of the West's colonized indigenous tribal peoples, Williams here traces the development of the themes that justified and impelled Spanish, English, and American conquests of the New World.

Like a Loaded Weapon

Like a Loaded Weapon
Author: Robert A. Williams
Publisher: U of Minnesota Press
Total Pages: 309
Release: 2005-11-10
Genre: Law
ISBN: 1452907560

Robert A. Williams Jr. boldly exposes the ongoing legal force of the racist language directed at Indians in American society. Fueled by well-known negative racial stereotypes of Indian savagery and cultural inferiority, this language, Williams contends, has functioned “like a loaded weapon” in the Supreme Court’s Indian law decisions. Beginning with Chief Justice John Marshall’s foundational opinions in the early nineteenth century and continuing today in the judgments of the Rehnquist Court, Williams shows how undeniably racist language and precedent are still used in Indian law to justify the denial of important rights of property, self-government, and cultural survival to Indians. Building on the insights of Malcolm X, Thurgood Marshall, and Frantz Fanon, Williams argues that racist language has been employed by the courts to legalize a uniquely American form of racial dictatorship over Indian tribes by the U.S. government. Williams concludes with a revolutionary proposal for reimagining the rights of American Indians in international law, as well as strategies for compelling the current Supreme Court to confront the racist origins of Indian law and for challenging bigoted ways of talking, thinking, and writing about American Indians. Robert A. Williams Jr. is professor of law and American Indian studies at the James E. Rogers College of Law, University of Arizona. A member of the Lumbee Indian Tribe, he is author of The American Indian in Western Legal Thought: The Discourses of Conquest and coauthor of Federal Indian Law.

Bribes

Bribes
Author: John Thomas Noonan
Publisher: Univ of California Press
Total Pages: 868
Release: 1987-01-01
Genre: History
ISBN: 9780520061545

Traces the history of bribery from ancient Egypt to ABSCAM, examines changing perceptions of bribery, and discusses the legal, ethical and religious injunctions against bribes

Exhibits

Exhibits
Author: United States. Congress. Senate. Select Committee on Ethics
Publisher:
Total Pages: 1064
Release: 1981
Genre: Abscam Bribery Scandal, 1980
ISBN:

Savage Anxieties

Savage Anxieties
Author: Robert A. Williams, Jr.
Publisher: Macmillan
Total Pages: 273
Release: 2012-08-21
Genre: History
ISBN: 0230338763

Presents an intellectual history of the West's bias against tribalism that explains how acts of war and dispossession have been justified in the name of civilization and have typically victimized tribal groups.