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  • Contributors

Candace S. Greene is an ethnologist with the Department of Anthropology of the Smithsonian’s National Museum of Natural History. She holds a PhD in anthropology from the University of Oklahoma. Her research focuses on material culture of the Plains region, particularly pictorial art. She also directs the Summer Institute in Museum Anthropology, a research training program based at the Smithsonian.

Eileen M. Luna-Firebaugh is associate professor of American Indian law and policy at the University of Arizona. She is Choctaw and Cherokee. Luna-Firebaugh is an attorney and holds an mpa from the Kennedy School at Harvard University. She is a member of the governing board of the Southwest Center on Law and Policy, which promulgates policies, codes, and ordinances for tribal governments, and is a member of the faculty of the National Tribal Trial College, sponsored by the US Department of Justice. Luna-Firebaugh is the author of a number of journal articles and chapters on American Indian tribal police and tribal policy issues and of Tribal Policing: Asserting Sovereignty, Seeking Justice, published in 2007 by the University of Arizona Press.

Christina Gish Hill received her PhD in American studies from the University of Minnesota and is currently an assistant professor at Iowa State University in anthropology and American Indian studies. Her research examines Indigenous constructions of political autonomy and their strategic articulations during negotiations over the encroachment of the state.

David Martínez (Gila River Pima) is an associate professor of American Indian studies at Arizona State University. He is also the author of Dakota Philosopher: Charles Eastman and American Indian Thought (Minnesota Historical Society Press, 2009) and the editor of The American Indian Intellectual Tradition: An Anthology of Writings from 1772 to 1972 (Cornell University Press, 2011). [End Page 409]

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