Charles Wilkinson featured in Athearn Lecture Series
CU Law and CNAIS Core faculty, will be delivering the Department of History's annual this year.
"Writing a Tribal History: My Long and Rewarding Journey with the Siletz Tribe of Western Oregon."
DATE: Thurs. Jan. 26, 2017
TIME: 5 PM - a reception will follow the lecture
WHERE: Eaton Humanities 150
Professor Wilkinson's primary specialties are federal public land law and Indian Law. Most recently he's been in the news for his role in the Bear Ears Monument - . His Law School bio page includes the following:
The late Prof. Robert G. Athearn (1914–1983) was a professor of Western History at the University of Colorado at Â鶹ӰԺ from 1947 until his retirement in 1982.As part of his legacy, Dr. Athearn endowed a lectureship in the at Â鶹ӰԺ to be held on topics in Western history.ÌýIn addition to his many articles in law reviews, popular journals, and newspapers, his fourteen books include the standard law texts on public land law and on Indian law. He also served as managing editor of Felix S. Cohen'sÌýHandbook of Federal Indian Law, the leading treatise on Indian law. The books he has written in recent years, such as 1992'sÌý, are aimed at a general audience, and they discuss society, history, and land in the American West. He won the Colorado Book Award forÌý, a profile of Billy Frank, Jr. of the Nisqually Tribe of western Washington. In his book,Ìý, he poses what he calls "the most fundamental question of all: Can the Indian voice endure?"Ìý In his latest bookÌý, Professor Wilkinson writes about how the history of the Siletz Tribe is in many ways the history of many Indian tribes: a story of heartache, perseverance, survival, and revival. Prior to joining the faculty of Colorado Law School, Charles Wilkinson practiced law with private firms in Phoenix and San Francisco and then with the Native American Rights Fund