Laying Down the Law: Critical Legal Histories of the North American West
A Joint Symposium Sponsored by the William P. Clements Center for Southwest Studies at ÃÛÌÒ½´and the University of Nebraska Lincoln’s History Department and Center for Great Plains Studies
October 2016 | University of Nebraska-Lincoln
February 2017 | SMU-Dallas
Published in 2018 by the University Press of Kansas, , Katrina Jagodinsky and Pablo Mitchell, eds.
"Laying Down the Law" explored how competing legal regimes—regional, national, and international—affects the way denizens of the West are often forced to negotiate thickets of legal ambiguities and contradictions in securing their rights and in some cases their lives
Legal borderlands include spaces in the Americas crisscrossed by political and racial/ethnic boundaries. Other legal borderlands are international boundaries like El Paso, Texas and Juarez, Chihuahua; or bordertowns on the margins of Indian reservations like Whiteclay, Nebraska and Pine Ridge, South Dakota. In addition to physical spaces, legal borderlands also include philosophical spaces where the legal code is ambiguous or contradictory—for instance, in laws that invite one group of immigrants to the Caribbean and enslave another group of migrants. Similarly contradictory legal borderlands include statutory support of violence initiated as self-defense, equal access to marriage without equal protection against discrimination for homosexuals, or conflicting executive and legislative mandates on Nebraska’s death penalty.
The group held private workshops and later a public event, the Carroll R. Pauley Symposium, at the University of Nebraska-Lincoln on October 6 and 7, 2016. Evelyn Hu-DeHart of Brown University served as the keynote speaker on the evening of October 6th. The group reconvened in Dallas at ÃÛÌÒ½´in February for another round of workshops and manuscript revisions.
"Laying down the Law" includes essays by: Sarah Deer "Settler Anxiety and the Violence Against Women Act"; Kelly Lytle Hernandez, "Reforming Deportees;" Jeff Shepherd, "Blackfeet Border Crossings;" Andrea Geiger, "Alaska Native Courtroom Strategies;" Tom Romero, "Water Distribution & Restriction;" Dana Weiner, "African American Land Rights in California;" Brian Frehner, "Oil Exploitation in Indian Territory;" Alicia Gutierrez, "Border Crossing for Abortions;" Allison Powers Useche, "Mexican Nationals & the US-Mexico Claims Commission; and Danielle Olden, "Court-Ordered Desegregation in Denver."
Conference co-organizers and co-editors: Katrina Jagodinsky (University of Nebraska Lincoln) and Pablo Mitchell (Oberlin College).