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Living at the intersection of multiple identities in the United
States can be dangerous. This is especially true for Native women
who live on the more than 56 million acres that comprise
America’s Indian Country – the legal term for American Indian
reservations and other land held in trust for Native people. Today,
due to a complicated system of criminal jurisdiction, non-Native
Americans can commit crimes against American Indians in much of
Indian Country with virtual impunity. This has created what some
call a modern day «hunting ground» in which Native women are
specifically targeted by non-Native men for sexual violence. In
this urgent and timely book, author Amy L. Casselman exposes the
shameful truth of how the American government has systematically
divested Native nations of the basic right to protect the people in
their own communities. A problem over 200 years in the making,
Casselman highlights race and gender in federal law to challenge
the argument that violence against Native women in Indian country
is simply collateral damage from a complex but necessary legal
structure. Instead, she demonstrates that what’s happening in
Indian country is part of a violent colonial legacy – one that
has always relied on legal and sexual violence to disempower Native
communities as a whole.
Living at the intersection of multiple identities in the United
States can be dangerous. This is especially true for Native women
who live on the more than 56 million acres that comprise America's
Indian Country - the legal term for American Indian reservations
and other land held in trust for Native people. Today, due to a
complicated system of criminal jurisdiction, non-Native Americans
can commit crimes against American Indians in much of Indian
Country with virtual impunity. This has created what some call a
modern day "hunting ground" in which Native women are specifically
targeted by non-Native men for sexual violence. In this urgent and
timely book, author Amy L. Casselman exposes the shameful truth of
how the American government has systematically divested Native
nations of the basic right to protect the people in their own
communities. A problem over 200 years in the making, Casselman
highlights race and gender in federal law to challenge the argument
that violence against Native women in Indian country is simply
collateral damage from a complex but necessary legal structure.
Instead, she demonstrates that what's happening in Indian country
is part of a violent colonial legacy - one that has always relied
on legal and sexual violence to disempower Native communities as a
whole.
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