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Land Is Kin - Sovereignty, Religious Freedom, and Indigenous Sacred Sites, Foreword by Judge Abby Abinanti
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Land Is Kin - Sovereignty, Religious Freedom, and Indigenous Sacred Sites, Foreword by Judge Abby Abinanti
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Responding to Vine Deloria, Jr.’s call for all people to
“become involved” in the struggle to protect Indigenous sacred
sites, Dana Lloyd’s Land Is Kin proposes a rethinking of sacred
sites, and a rethinking of even land itself. Deloria suggested
using the principle of religious freedom, but this principle has
failed Indigenous peoples for decades. Lloyd argues that religious
freedom fails Indigenous claimants because settler law creates a
tension between two competing rights—one party’s religious
freedom and another party’s property rights. In this contest, the
right of property will always win.Through an analysis of the 1988
US Supreme Court case Lyng v. Northwest Indian Cemetery Protective
Association, which she interprets as a case about sovereignty and
the meaning of land, Lloyd proposes a multilayered understanding of
land and the different roles it can simultaneously play. Rejecting
the binary logic of sacred religion versus secular property, Lloyd
uses the legal dispute over the High Country—an area of the Six
Rivers National Forest in Northern California sacred to the Yurok,
Karuk, and Tolowa Indigenous nations—to show that there are at
least five different, but not equally valid, ways to understand
land in the Lyng case: home, property, sacred site, wilderness, and
kin. To protect the High Country, the Yurok filed a religious
freedom lawsuit but then proceeded to describe the land as their
home in court. They lobbied for protecting the High Country through
a wilderness designation even as they continued to argue that they
had been managing it for centuries. They have purchased large
parcels of ancestral land and also declare the land their kin, a
relationship that ostensibly excludes the possibility of ownership.
Land Is Kin demonstrates the complexity of land in contemporary
religious, political, and legal discourse. By drawing on Indigenous
perspectives on the land as kin, Lloyd points toward a framework
that shifts sovereignty away from binary oppositions—between
property and sacred site, between the federal government and Native
nations—towards seeing the land itself as sovereign.
General
Imprint: |
University Press of Kansas
|
Country of origin: |
United States |
Release date: |
October 2023 |
Authors: |
Dana Lloyd
• Judge Abby Abinanti
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Dimensions: |
229 x 152mm (L x W) |
Pages: |
224 |
ISBN-13: |
978-0-7006-3589-4 |
Categories: |
Books
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LSN: |
0-7006-3589-0 |
Barcode: |
9780700635894 |
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