Deadliest Enemies

Deadliest Enemies

Law and Race Relations on and off Rosebud Reservation

Thomas Biolsi

How U.S. federal law creates racial conflict between Native American and white people

280 Pages, 6 x 9 in

  • Paperback
  • 9780816649716
  • Published: May 9, 2007
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Deadliest Enemies

Law and Race Relations on and off Rosebud Reservation

Thomas Biolsi

ISBN: 9780816649716

Publication date: May 9th, 2007

280 Pages

9 x 5

Many people living far away from Indian reservations express sympathy for the poverty and misery experienced by Native Americans, yet, Thomas Biolsi argues, the problems faced by Native Americans are the results of white privilege.

 

In Deadliest Enemies, Biolsi connects the origins of racial tension between Indians and non-Indians on the Rosebud Reservation in South Dakota to federal laws, showing how the courts have created opposing political interests along race lines. Biolsi demonstrates that the court’s definitions of legal rights—both constitutional and treaty rights—make solutions to racial tensions intractable.

 

This powerful work sheds much-needed light on racial conflicts in South Dakota and in the rest of the United States, and holds white people accountable for the benefits of their racial privilege that come at the expense of Native Americans.

 

Thomas Biolsi is professor of Native American studies at the University of California at Berkeley.