Faculty Scholarship

The faculty members of Arizona Law are among the most influential legal scholars in the world. Our faculty routinely produce powerful and provocative scholarship, from shaping legal debate on water policy and ethics, to conducting research that identifies and solves important real-world challenges like jury bias and internet censorship.

2011

Articles in Books

  • Hopkins, James, 

    Tribal Sovereignty and Climate Change:  Moving Toward Intergovernmental Cooperation, in Navigating Climate Change Policy:  The Opportunities of Federalism 48 (Edella Schlager, Kirsten Engel, & Sally Rider eds., 2011).

    Available at: http://ssrn.com/abstract=2014361

2008

Articles

  • Hopkins, James, 

    Rights for Indigenous Peoples: The Struggle for Uniformity: The UN Declaration and Beyond, 9 Geo. J. Int'l Aff. 75 (2008).

2006

Articles

  • Hopkins, James, 

    Therapeutic Lending in a Post-Colonial World, 14 Mich. St. J. Int'l L. 439 (2006).

2005

Articles in Books

  • Hopkins, James, 

    Visions of Indigenous Prosperity: Economic Self-Determination and the Role of Federal Indian, in Legal Aspects of Aboriginal Business Development 67 (Joseph E. Magnet & Dwight A. Dorey eds., 2005).

2004

Articles

  • Hopkins, James, 

    Aboriginal Judicial Appointments to the Supreme Court of Canada, Prepared for the Indigenous Bar Association & submitted to the Canadian Parliamentary Standing Committee on Justice and Human Rights and the Canadian Bar Association (2004) (co-author, with Albert C. Peeling).

2003

Other Writings

  • Hopkins, James, 

    Book Review, 5 Indigenous L. Bull. 22 (Mar. 2003) (reviewing Peter Edwards, One Dead Indian: The Premier, the Police, and the Ipperwash Crisis (2001)).

2002

Articles in Books

  • Hopkins, James, 

    Constitutional Aspects of Aboriginal Economic Development: Taxation and Aboriginal Governance in Canada, in Constitucion y Derechos Indigenas 29 (Jorge Galvan ed., 2002).

Articles

  • Hopkins, James, 

    Betting on Self-Determination, 5 Indigenous L. Bull. 8 ( July 2002).

2001

Other Writings

  • Hopkins, James, 

    Democratization by Taxation: Roberto Unger's Democratic Experimentalism in Aboriginal Canada (2001) (unpublished LL.M./ITP thesis, Harvard Law School) (on file with the Harvard Law School Library).