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Linking Arms Together: American Indian Treaty Visions of Law and Peace, 1600-1800
 
 
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Linking Arms Together: American Indian Treaty Visions of Law and Peace, 1600-1800 [Hardcover]

Robert A. Williams Jr. (Author)

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Book Description

March 20, 1997
Robert Williams attempts to write Indians back into Indian law by developing a greater appreciation for the contributions of American Indian legal visions and demonstrating how ancient treaty visions can speak to the modern, multicultural age. Prior to European colonization, in countless treaties, councils, and negotiations, American Indians had adhered to the principles contained in traditional rituals such as the Gus-Wen-Tah, the sacred treaty belt, for achieving justice between different peoples. Throughout the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries, the survival of the European colonies in North America required reaching accommodation with surrounding Indian tribes. However, European Common law and the white man's Indian law eventually became dominant, and came to be regarded as the salvation of the Indian in North America.

Williams maintains there is an important need for a more complete account of the legal visions of the American Indians. In this work, he examines the Indians' role in the history of legal traditions which have determined Indian rights in the U.S., including the Indian conceptions of justice, their traditions, and practices. Doing so is essential to protecting Indian tribalism's survival under U.S. law. In addition, understanding how the American Indian legal traditions have worked to help perpetuate Indian tribalism might also assist in beginning to understand how U.S. law may achieve racial justice more generally.

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Editorial Reviews

Review


"Pathbreaking."--Choice


"Williams offers a compelling description of Indian diplomatic visions and methods. It is a rich addition to the literature."--The Law and Politics Book Review


"...Linking Arms Together makes a good start at reconstructing Indian legal thought. It is well worth reading for anyone interested in the relationship between law and multiculturalism."--Western Historical Quarterly


"...impressive: an ambitious and deeply suggestive effort to illuminate indigenous thought at the time of the European encounter and put it back in the history of Indian-white relations and federal Indian law- where it belongs."--The Annals of the American Academy


About the Author


Robert A. Williams, Jr. is Professor of Law and American Indian Studies at the University of Arizona at Tucson. He is the author of the highly-regarded work The American Indian in Western Legal Thought (Oxford, 1990).

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Inside This Book (learn more)
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First Sentence:
The task of developing a more complete understanding of the response of American Indians to the coming of the white man immediately confronts a formidable obstacle: the great American mythos of frontier conquest. Read the first page
Key Phrases - Statistically Improbable Phrases (SIPs): (learn more)
treaty literature, peace between different peoples, multicultural frontier, multicultural constitutionalism, wampum gift, forest diplomacy, treaty visions, measured separatism, multicultural unity, treaty belt, intertribal diplomacy, era diplomacy, achieving law, treaty partners, treaty relationship, customary bonds, era frontier, legal visions, bowl metaphor, supra note, text accompanying notes, frontier conquest, pipe rituals, common bowl, supra text accompanying note
Key Phrases - Capitalized Phrases (CAPs): (learn more)
North America, American Indian, Indians of the Encounter, Condolence Council, New York, Three Rivers, Eastern Woodlands, Black Elk, Five Nations, United States, Wakan Tanka, Great Lakes, Great Spirit, Old World, Woodlands Indian, Lower Creeks, William Penn, New England, South Carolina, Father Vimont, Tree of Peace, Treaty of Greenville, Western Indians, Mississippi River, White Buffalo Cow Woman
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