ILP Alumni & Friends Awards Ceremony & Reception – Send RSVP by April 1st

ILP Alumni Reception Award Ceremony 032416

 

Awards will be presented at the 17th Annual ILP Alumni & Friends Awards Ceremony & Reception to be held April 7, 2016 (5-7 p.m.) at Shadow Lounge, Talking Stick Resort in Scottsdale, Arizona. We hope you will join us to celebrate their recognition!
Please send your RSVP to ILP@asu.edu by Friday, April 1, 2016.

Professor Ferguson-Bohnee’s article recently added to SSRN

Professor Patty Ferguson-Bohnee has released the article, The History of Indian Voting Rights in Arizona: Overcoming Decades of Voter Suppression, to SSRN.

Abstract:
Native Americans “have experienced a long history of disenfranchisement as a matter of law and of practice.” This comes from a complicated and contradictory history of laws and policy that has recognized tribes as separate sovereigns, reduced tribal status to that of domestic dependent nations, sought to remove, relocate, or assimilate tribal citizens, terminated numerous indigenous nations, and has now moved to a policy of tribal self-government. Unfortunately, the right to vote for Arizona’s first people has only recently been achieved, and there are continuing threats to the electoral franchise.

Voter suppression has been used to discourage or prevent Indian people from voting in Arizona. Voter qualifications such as literacy tests were used to prevent Indians from participating in elections for approximately fifty years. Once Native Americans started voting, redistricting and vote dilution were used to reduce the effectiveness of the Native vote.

This article will review the history of Indian voting rights in Arizona. The author begins by reviewing the history of Native American voting rights and the history of voting discrimination against Native Americans in Arizona. The Voting Rights Act turned the corner for Native people to participate in the state and federal election processes. The article then discusses the current challenges faced by Native American voters and specifically discuss the voter ID law passed in 2004. The voter ID law is a roadblock that impedes full participation by all Arizona Indians. The last part of the article focuses on strategies to protect Indian voting rights. Notwithstanding the Supreme Court’s invalidation of the Section 5 coverage formula in Shelby County, tribes should consider proactive measures to ensure that tribal citizens can participate in elections.

 

ILP Alumni & Friends Awards Ceremony & Reception – Announcing this year’s award recipients!

ILP Alumni Reception Award Ceremony 032416

Happy to announce this year’s award recipients! Congratulations to Benjamin Hanley and Charles W. Galbraith for their dedication and leadership in Indian Country.

Awards will be presented at the 17th Annual ILP Alumni & Friends Awards Ceremony & Reception to be held April 7, 2016 (5-7 p.m.) at Shadow Lounge, Talking Stick Resort in Scottsdale, Arizona. We hope you will join us to celebrate their recognition! Don’t forget to send your RSVP to ILP@asu.edu by April 1, 2016.

Professor Miller’s book chapter “American Indian Entrepreneurship” available on SSRN

Professor Robert J. Miller has released a book chapter on SSRN. You can download the chapter on American Indian Entrepreneurship for free. The Abstract is also below.

Abstract:
Almost none of the 300 Indian reservations located in the lower forty-eight states possess functioning economies in which reservation residents and visitors can purchase the goods and services commonly available in the U.S…. economy. A private, free market economy obviously requires private business owners, i.e., entrepreneurs. The percentage of private business ownership among American Indians, however, is by far the lowest for any identifiable group in the U.S. and this fact alone contributes greatly to the poverty and lack of economic activity on reservations. Consequently, to assist Indian nations and communities to unlock their wealth and to improve their economic and social conditions, tribal governments and others need to focus on increasing the number of on-reservation Indian entrepreneurs and creating more privately owned businesses and private-sector economies on reservations.

Preserving Tribal Sovereignty through Strength and Collaboration by Governor Steven Roe Lewis – April 13

Steven Roe LewisAmerican Indian Studies is a proud sponsor of an upcoming public talk by Gila River Indian Community Governor Stephen Roe Lewis. In addition to serving in the executive office at Gila River, Governor Lewis is a graduate of ASU with a degree in American Indian Studies.

Wednesday, February 13 (11:30 a.m. – 1:30 p.m.)
Memorial Union, Alumni Lounge

Professor Patty Ferguson-Bohnee in ASU Now!

2011 Patty Ferguson Bohnee preferred-cropped 352

Patty Ferguson-Bohnee, faculty director of the Indian Legal Program in ASU’s Sandra Day O’Connor College of Law, knows firsthand about the struggles of indigenous people. Her family grew up in southern Louisiana during the era of desegregation; as a result, she felt that her own people were minimized in the quest for equality. Now she fights for them and all Native Americans – a mission that aligns well into ASU’s advocacy efforts. Read full article – Fighting for her people.