Abstract
Native Americans have been structurally excluded from the discipline of political science in the continental United States, as has Native epistemology and political issues. I analyze the reasons for these erasures and elisions, noting the combined effects of rejecting Native scholars, political issues, analysis, and texts. I describe how these arise from presumptions inherent to the disciplinary practices of U.S. political science, and suggest a set of alternative formulations that could expand our understanding of politics, including attention to other forms of law, constitutions, relationships to the environment, sovereignty, collective decision-making, U.S. history, and majoritarianism.
Publisher
Cambridge University Press (CUP)
Subject
Political Science and International Relations
Reference37 articles.
1. “Including Native American Perspectives in the Political Science Curriculum.”;Wilmer;PS: Political Science and Politics,1994
2. “Unsettling Lessons: Teaching Indigenous Politics and Settler Colonialism in Political Science.”;Wadsworth;PS: Political Science and Politics,2014
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40 articles.
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