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CNAIS Law Professors present at Indigenous Storytelling & Law Symposium

CU American Indian Law Program faculty

American Indian Law Professors to Present at Indigenous Storytelling and Law Symposium

On March 17-18, Dean S. James Anaya and University of Colorado Law School professors will participate in anhosted by the Center for Native American and Indigenous Studies exploring ways in which indigenous narratives are spoken, heard, and acted upon in legal settings.

Throughout the two-day event, experts in American Indian law across academia, Indian tribes, law firms, and activist groups will focus on these guiding questions:

  • What does it mean for law to solicit Native testimony?
  • Who tells such stories, with what authority, and with what protections and possible consequences?
  • How do traditions and stories get reshaped in legal contexts? How might storytelling challenge law?

The symposium will close with a special session, “,” featuring Dean S. James Anaya and professors Kristen Carpenter, Rick Collins, Carla Fredericks, Sarah Krakoff, and Charles Wilkinson on Saturday, March 18, 3:45-5:30 p.m., in Wittemyer Courtroom.

They will be joined by Troy Eid and Jennifer Weddle, shareholders at Greenberg Traurig, LLP and co-chairs of the firm’s American Indian law practice group; Maymangwa Flying Earth, attorney advisor for the Office of General Counsel at the U.S. Small Business Administration; and Theresa Halsey, producer and host of KGNU Community Radio’sIndian Voices.