Pagans in the Promised Land image
Pagans in the Promised Land image

Pagans in the Promised Land

Books | Law / General

Steven T. Newcomb
Pagans in the Promised Land provides a startling challenge to U.S. federal Indian law and policy. Using history and cognitive theory, Steven Newcomb demonstrates how U.S. government officials have used religious concepts of Christendom, often unconsciously, to justify the taking of Native American lands and to deny the original independence of Indian nations. He demonstrates that the landmark case Johnson v. M'Intosh is premised in part on the Old Testament narrative of the "chosen people" having a divine right to the "promised land," and how continued U.S. reliance on ancient religious distinctions between "Christians" and "heathens" violates the bedrock doctrine of separations of church and state. An important addition to Native American and legal scholarship, Pagans in the Promised Land makes a compelling case for the reversal of this conqueror-based doctrine, which continues to influence U.S. federal Indian law and policy to this day.
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Author
Steven T. Newcomb
Pages
186
Publisher
Fulcrum Publishing
Published Date
2008
ISBN
1555916422 9781555916428
Ratings
Google: 5

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