Submitted by Elissa Washuta
on
The most recent issue of American Indian Culture and Research Journal was guest edited by Luana Ross, Associate Professor of Gender, Women, and Sexuality Studies and Co-Director of Native Voices.
The issue, "Settler Colonialism and the Legislating of Criminality," includes the following articles:
Articles
- The Violent Legacies of the California Missions: Mapping the Origins of Native Women’s Mass Incarceration by Jackie Teran
- Reproductive Justice, Sovereignty, and Incarceration: Prison Abolition Politics and California Indians by Stephanie Lumsden
- Invisible Victims: American Indian Women and Adolescent Involvement in the Domestic Sex Trade by Lena Campagna
- Locked Up: Fear, Racism, Prison Economics, and the Incarceration of Native Youth by Addie C. Rolnick
- Through His Eyes: Life in the South Dakota State Penitentiary by Melissa Leal and Robert Angelo Horse
- Stories of Transformation: Aboriginal Offenders' Journey from Prison to the Community by Teresa M. Howell
- Adoptive Couple v. Baby Girl: Policing Authenticity, Implicit Racial Bias, and Continued Harm to American Indian Families by Theresa Rocha Beardall
- Carceral Power and Indigenous Feminist Resurgence in D’Arcy McNickle’s The Surrounded and Janet Campbell Hale’s “Claire” by Dory Nason
- A Constellation of Confinement: The Jailing of Cecelia Capture and the Deaths of Sarah Lee Circle Bear and Sandra Bland, 1895–2015 by Tria Blu Wakpa
Read more here.