Stephen Graham Jones is a Professor of Distinction, and the Ineva Reilly Baldwin Endowed Chair in the English Department at CU Boulder. Jones is the NYT bestselling author of nearly thirty-five novels, novellas, graphic novels, and anthologies. His work includes Mongrels, The Only Good Indians, The Indian Lake trilogy, the comic book Earthdivers, I Was a Teenage Slasher, and The Buffalo Hunter Hunter.
Clint Carroll is Associate Professor of Ethnic Studies at the University of Colorado Boulder. His book, Roots of Our Renewal: Ethnobotany and Cherokee Environmental Governance (2015, University of Minnesota Press), explores how tribal natural resource managers navigate the material and structural conditions of settler colonialism, as well as how recent efforts in cultural revitalization are informing such practices through traditional forms of decision-making and local environmental knowledge.
S. James Anaya is a Distinguished Professor and Nicholas Doman Professor of International Law at the CU Law School. Anaya has taught and written extensively on international human rights and issues concerning Indigenous peoples. He has advised numerous Indigenous and other organizations from several countries on matters of human rights and Indigenous peoples, and he has represented Indigenous groups from many parts of North and Central America in landmark cases before domestic and international tribunals, including the United States Supreme Court and the Inter-American Court of Human Rights.
Angelica Lawson (Northern Arapaho) is Assistant Professor of Film Studies and Ethnic Studies. Her work seeks to examine the intersections of national and transnational trends in Indigenous film and media. To this end, she has worked with Indigenous scholars, artists, and filmmakers from the United States, Aotearoa / New Zealand, Norway, and Finland.
Natalie Avalos is an Assistant Professor in the Department of Ethnic Studies and Affiliate Faculty in the Religious Studies and Women and Gender Studies Departments. Avalos is an ethnographer of religion whose research and teaching focus on comparative Indigeneities, urban Indian and Tibetan refugee religious life, decolonial praxis, and healing historical trauma. She is a Chicana of Mexican Indigenous descent, born and raised in the Bay Area.
This section of the guide suggests books and other media that highlight many contemporary and historical issues related to Native American and Indigenous communities. Explore these resources to take your education on these topics into your own hands.