Alcatraz Recollections
American Indian Placemaking on Alcatraz, 1969-1971
American Indians in World War I: Military Service as Catalyst for Reform
Among Ghost Dances: Sarah Winnemucca and the Production of Tribal Identity
Being Indigenous: Perspectives on Activism, Culture, Language and Identity
The Bloody Wake of Alcatraz: Political Repression of the American Indian Movement during the 1970s
Blueprints for Indian Education: Improving Mainstream Schooling
Book Reviews
Confluence: Water as an Analytic of Indigenous Feminisms
Confronting Cannabis: Legalization on Native Nation Lands and the Impacts of Differential Federal Enforcement
Author examines the laws and enforcement practices of the United States in relation to Indigenous nations that choose to legalize medical, recreational, or agricultural cannabis. Article also considers the economic consequences of the legislation and its enforcement.
The Culture is Prevention Project: Adapting the Cultural Connectedness Scale for Multi-Tribal Communities
The Eagles I Fed Who Did Not Love Me
Energy East and Dakota Access: Pipelines, Protest, and the Obstacles of Mutual Unintelligibility
Exiled in the Land of the Free: Democracy, Indian Nations, and the U.S. Constitution
Explaining the Little Bighorn: Race and Progress in the Native Press
For the Benefit of Indian Peoples: An Analysis of Indian Land Consolidation Policy
From the Reservation to Smithsonian via Alcatraz
The Frontier Army and the Destruction of the Buffalo: 1865-1883
Examines whether there was a direct link between army policy and extermination of the buffalo through a study of "official military reports, personal letters, the reminiscences of retired army officers and ex-buffalo hunters, the observations of Indian Bureau personnel and Indians themselves, along with other eye-witness accounts".
The Government and the Indians: The American Indian Occupation of Alcatraz Island, 1969-1971
How Grandma Kate Lost Her Cherokee Blood and What This Says about Race, Blood, and Belonging in Indian Country
Indian Land, White Man's Law: Southern California Revisited
Indian Students and Reminiscences of Alcatraz
Indigenous Activism, Community Sustainability, and the Constraints of CANZUS Settler-Colonial Nationhood.
Modern Warriors: Mobilization and Decline of the American Indian Movement (AIM), 1968-1979
The Mystery Man of Sand Creek: George Laird Shoup
Native Narratives: The Representation of Native Americans in Public Broadcasting
Looks at radio and television coverage of key events or issues in both non-Native American-produced and Native American-created programs found in the American Archive of Public Broadcasting collection. Divided into five sections: (Mis)Representations of Native Americans; Termination, Relocation, and Restoration; The American Indian Movement; Native Americans in Contemporary News Media; and Visual Sovereignty: Native-Created Public Media.