UPCOMING EVENTS
ISN PROGRAM
AT APSA 2008
The Indigenous Studies
Network plans two cosponsored panels and a business meeting
and networking session at the 2008 American Political Science
Association (APSA) meeting in Boston, Massachusetts, August
28-31.
The program for the meeting,
including other Indigenous panels, papers posters and meetings
was posted in June, and will be updated thereafter at: http://apsanet.org/section_222.cfm.
Locations of sessions will be in the printed program available
at meeting registration at the APSA meeting. For more information
contact ISN Program Coordinators: Darlene Williams: williamsd018@hawaii.rr.com,
and Stephanie DiAlto, sdialto@uci.edu.
Reconceiving the National Story, Co-sponsored by Politics, Literature, and Film, 41-3
and ISN 1, Friday, Aug 29, 10:15 am
Each of the four papers on this panel
investigates the ways in which the reconstruction of national
identity in times of political transition is a literary
project. Hunt's work combines empirical research and theory
to show how new states use literature to support their establishment.
Salinas' paper on Jorge Luis Borges examines the contribution of literature
to the understanding of the collective self and the individual
identities within it. Sullivan's paper examines how a minority
uses myth and story to establish cohesion within a larger
community. Rahman and Chestnut explore the special power
of literature to shape narratives of societal transformation
during post-authoritarian transitions.
Chair: Peter Josephson
Co-discussants: Cyrus Ernesto
Zirakzadeh & Peter Josephson
1. Stacey Leigh Hunt: “Violent
Literatures: Uniting the Nation; Revealing the State.”
2. K Sabeel Rahman: “Historical
Narrative and Reconciliation: The Literary Public Sphere
in Post-Authoritarian Transitions.”
3. Eileen Sullivan: “How Can
A Catholic Minority Survive In A Secular Society? Guidance
From Popular Fiction.”
4. Alejandra M. Salinas: “Culture,
politics and literature in Jorge Luis Borges.”
American Indian Legal Claims: Negotiating Rights and Identities
through a Non-Native Judicial Lens,
Co-sponsored by ISN and Race,
Ethnicity, and Politics (REP), 32-27 and ISN 2, Thursday,
Aug 28, 10:15 AM
Chair: Stephanie Di Alto, sdialto@uci.edu.
Co-discussants: Sheryl Lightfoot,
slightft@umn.edu and Timothy Waligore, tpw2001@columbia.edu.
1. Paula Mohan: “Moving Beyond
‘Mea Culpa’: Reparations and Damages to Indigenous Peoples
in the Cobell Class Action Suit.”
2. Urszula Piasta, ulapiasta@yahoo.com:
“Hartford Convention: A Compromise of Interests between
New York and Massachusetts in the Western New York Territorial
Dispute and its Impact on the Seneca Nation Land Title.”
3. Anne Flaherty, afb4@duke.edu:
“Innocent until Proven Greedy? American Indian Land Claims and Gaming Rights.”
4. Michael Lerma, lerma@email.arizona.edu:
“Federal Indian Law and the Rehnquist Court: a search for unstated norms.”
ISN Business Meeting:
Thursday, Aug 28, 12:15 PM.
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WSSA 2008 AMERICAN INDIAN
STUDIES SECTION PROGRAM, April
15-18, 2009
The American Indian Studies
Section of the Western Social Science Association, at
its 51st meeting, expects to again have a full program of
panels at the association's meeting at the Hyatt Regency
Downtown, in Albuquerque, April 15-18, Paper/panel proposals
for the American Indian Studies Section can either be submitted
on line by going to: http://wssa.asu.edu/wssa_conference.htm,
or by sending them (preferably by E-mail) to AIS section
coordinator Tom Hoffman <dr_tomh@swbell.net. Deadline
for proposals, including abstracts, will be no earlier than
November 1. Information, which will eventually include the
preliminary program, can be accessed on line at: http://wssa.asu.edu.
There are several American
Indian Health Policy Symposiums around the country each
year a list is posted at: http://www.aihmp.com/conference.html.
The South Dakota
American Indian Health Policy Symposium will be in August.
For details go to: http://www.aihmp.com/2008-may-dakota.html.
The Oklahoma Symposium will be in November. Details can
be found at: http://www.aihmp.com/2008-aug-oklahoma.html.
A list of indigenous Language Conferences is kept at the Teaching
Indigenous Languages web site at Northern Arizona University:
http://www2.nau.edu/jar/Conf.html.
Fostering Indigenous Business
and Entrepreneurship in the Americas
Conference: FIBEA 2008
is at Manaus, Amazonas, Brazil,
July 22-25, 2008. for information go to: http://fibeamanaus.mgt.unm.edu/.
Third Annual Vine Deloria,
Jr. Indigenous Studies Symposium is at Northwest Indian College,
July 24-26, 2008. For detils and reservations contact Steve
Pavlik, Co-coordinator, Native American Studies, Northwest
Indian College,
2533 Kwina
Rd., Bwllingham, WA 98226 (360)392-4307, spavlik@nwic.edu.
The South Dakota American
Indian Health Policy Symposium will be in August. For
details go to: http://www.aihmp.com/2008-may-dakota.html.
The Fall 2008 California
Indian Conference will be at UC Riverside, Riverside, CA, October 2-4. Cliff Tafzer is the
organizer. For information, contact conference organizer,
Clifford Trafzer, (951)827-1974, History, Costo Professor
of American Indian Affairs, University of California, Riverside,
clifford.trafzer@ucr.edu.
The National Indian Education
Association Conference: Crossroads - Pulling Together our Indigenous Knowledge
is at the Washington State Convention & Trade Center
in Seattle, WA, October 23-26,
2008. For details go to: http://www.niea.org/events/overview.php.
Indian Gaming Regulatory Act of 1988, is October 16-17, 2008 at the Radison Fort McDowell Resort and
Casino, Scottsdale/Fountain Hills, AZ. For details call
(480) 965-7715, or go to: http://ilp.law.asu.edu/.
The Oklahoma American Indian Health Policy Symposiums will be in November. Details can be found at: http://www.aihmp.com/2008-aug-oklahoma.html.
The 3rd Native American
Women Conference, focusing on Information Management and Communication, is
scheduled for November 19-20, at the Sheraton Wildhorse
Pass Resort on the Gila River Indian Community. For details
contact Arizona Indian
Women In Action, P. O.
Box 53999 MS 8010, Phoenix,
AZ 85072-3999 (602)250-2553, info@arizonaiwia.org,
http://www.arizonaiwia.org/.
The 3rd Annual Native American Indian Education Conference
will be held,
November 14, 2008 at Indiana University Purdue University
Indianapolis (IUPUI). This year the theme of the conference
is Native Americans and New Media. For details
contact Charmayne Champion-Shaw: championshaw@yahoo.com.
Native/Indigenous Studies Area of the 2009 Southwest/Texas
Popular Culture/American Culture Association's 30th annual
meeting will be in February,
in Albuquerque, NM
at the Hyatt Regency Albuquerque.. Deadline may be as early as November 15 for proposals
for Panels and Individual Papers for the Native/Indigenous
Studies Area. Inquiries regarding this area and/or abstracts
of 250 words may be sent to Sara Sutler-Cohen, Area Co-Chair,
Native Studies, PCA/ACA Annual Regional Conferences, Department
of Sociology, Bellevue Community College, 3000
Landerholm Circle, SE, Bellevue, WA
98007, bcc.ctc.edu or sara.sutlercohen@gmail.com.
Deadline for conference registration may be December 31.
Further details regarding the conference (listing of all
areas, hotel, registration, tours, etc.) can be found at
http://sarasutlercohen.com/Projects.html and http://www.h-net.org/%7Eswpca/.
The 2008 World Indigenous Peoples
Congress on Education (WIPCE) is December 7-11 on
the traditional lands of the Kulin Nation, Melbourne, Australia. For details go to: www.wipce2008.com.
Conferences of the International Society for Language
Studies: Beginning in 2009, conferences will be held
on a two-year cycle (every other year) with publication
of the annual volume series Readings in Language Studies to be of primary focus
during the intervening year. Consistent with these changes,
the 2008 conference planned for New York has been cancelled, to be rescheduled for spring of 2009 at
a location to be announced. For information contact International
Society for Language Studies, c/o OSBORN, Graduate School
of Education, Fordham University, 113 W. 60th
Street, Room 1102, New York, NY 10023, conf2009@isls-inc.org, http://www.isls-inc.org/conference/conference.html.
The 2009 conference of the National Association of Native
American Studies probably will be held in February.
For information contact: Dr. Lemuel Berry, Jr., Executive Director, NANAS, P.O. Box 325, Biddeford, ME
04005-0325 (207}839-8004, Fax:
207/839-3776, naaasconference@earthlink.net, www.NAAAS.org.
The 2009 Indigenous Professor's
Association (IPA) likely will be in Lawrence, KS, hosted by Haskell Indian Nations
University and the Center for Indigenous
Nations Studies at the University of Kansas. For information contact
Julia GoodFox: jgoodfox@HASKELL.edu.
A listing may be at: http://www.news.ku.edu/2005/april/19/native.shtml.
5th Annual Southeast Indian
Studies Conference is
at the University
of North Carolina, Pembroke, April
2-3, 2009. Abstracts should be submitted by
December 19, 2008 to Ms. Alesia Cummings, American Indian
Studies Department, UNC-Pembroke, P. O. Box 1510, Pembroke, NC
28372, alesia.cummings@uncp.edu.
For more information, contact
Dr. Mary Ann Jacobs (910)775-4262, mary.jacobs@uncp.edu.
The 2009 National Center
for American Indian Enterprise and Development's Reservation
Economic Summit and American Indian Business Trade Fair
is at the Las Vegas Hilton March 9 - 12, 2009, with a focus
on the global marketplace. For more information, call (800)4NCAIED
or visit www.ncaied.org.
2009 Native American and Indigenous
Studies Conference is May 21-23, 2009 at the University of Minnesota in the
Twin Cities, hosted by the American Indian Studies Department
at the University of Minnesota: http://amin.umn.edu/NAIS2009/.
Paper proposals are due by December 1, 2008. For more information
go to the web site or contact Heather Dorr, UMN College
of Continuing Education, at cceconf3@umn.edu.
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