Gabe Galanda Publishes Scholarly Essay on Indigenous Kinship Renewal and Relational Sovereignty

Gabe Galanda has published "In the Spirit of Vine Deloria, Jr.: Indigenous Kinship Renewal and Relational Sovereignty" on SSRN.   

Next year his essay will be published by Fulcrum Books in a book that honors the legacy of Vine Deloria, Jr. Gabe will also present his paper at the 18th Annual Vine Deloria, Jr. Indigenous Studies Symposium this May.

In addition to Vine Deloria, Jr., Gabe honors several of his mentors and heroes by citation to their scholarship and words, including Robert Williams, Jr., Robert Hershey, Billy Frank, Jr., Darrell Hillaire, and Alan Parker.

Here's the abstract of his essay:

This essay heeds Vine Deloria, Jr.’s inspiring call for the renewal of Indigenous kinship tradition and counsels for the development of relational sovereignty. The first part deconstructs the U.S. Supreme Court’s 1978 landmark decision in Santa Clara Pueblo v. Martinez to expose its distinctly economic underpinnings. That case exemplifies a steady erosion of Indigenous reciprocity, and concurrent rise of tribal per-capitalism and neocolonialism. The second part suggests five actions that Native nations could take to restore inclusionary, duty-based kinship systems and rules.  First, Native nations should replace blood quantum with alternative citizenship criteria rooted in traditional kinship principles. Second, Native nations should renew kinship terminology to eliminate neocolonial identifiers. Third, Native nations should outlaw disenrollment and bring their relatives home. Fourth, Native nations should lift enrollment moratoria and welcome their lost generations. Lastly, Native nations should—after pausing to understand the colonial legacy of federally sanctioned monetary distributions to tribal individuals—cease per capita payments and reinvest in community revitalization. By drawing on Indigenous traditions of reciprocity and shared destiny, Native nations should reconcile their peoples’ modern individual rights with their customary obligations and duties to one another. Through these strategies, Native nations can engage in a new paradigm of relational sovereignty, whereby Indigenous human existence is exalted and protected over individual power and profit.