Hillary Hoffmann is Professor of Law, Vermont Law School. She has fifteen years of experience in the field of federal Indian law, representing tribal clients in private practice. Along with teaching and writing on tribal cultural preservation, she has also testified in Congress on a variety of related topics.
Inhaltsangabe
Preface 1. Legal history and foundations 2. The jurisdictional framework of the second way, and the Cherokee diaspora 3. Religious freedom, the value of sacred places, and the price of cultural ignorance 4. Clashing values, the Blackfeet, and a measure of success in the 'Badger-Two' 5. Federal cultural protection statutes: products of a dark history 6. Tribal laws: the embodiment of the third way 7. Both ends of the spectrum, and everything in between: state and local governments and indigenous cultures 8. Indigenous cultures and intellectual property 9. A 'third way' for the future.
Preface 1. Legal history and foundations 2. The jurisdictional framework of the second way, and the Cherokee diaspora 3. Religious freedom, the value of sacred places, and the price of cultural ignorance 4. Clashing values, the Blackfeet, and a measure of success in the 'Badger-Two' 5. Federal cultural protection statutes: products of a dark history 6. Tribal laws: the embodiment of the third way 7. Both ends of the spectrum, and everything in between: state and local governments and indigenous cultures 8. Indigenous cultures and intellectual property 9. A 'third way' for the future.
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