As a former staff attorney at the Native American Rights Fund for more than 35 years, Echo-Hawk has been instrumental in securing passage of two federal laws that respect Indian and religious freedoms and the repatriation of Native American remains.
His career spans the critical years when Native American tribes reclaimed land, sovereignty and pride, with his cases covering a variety of issues that included treaty rights, water rights, religious freedom, prisoner rights and legal questions around repatriation.
In concert with Professor Melody K. MacKenzie, Echo-Hawk will co-teach a three-credit course at the William S. Richardson School of Law that will examine, compare and contrast the legal frameworks that both define and enforce indigenous legal rights in the U.S. and other countries.
“The chance to listen to someone who has been so closely involved in the legal struggles for indigenous rights offers an exciting opportunity to our students,” said MacKenzie. “Mr. Echo-Hawk has been instrumental in defining and championing the changes in the laws to bring greater justice to native peoples.”
Echo-Hawk earned a political science degree in 1970 from Oklahoma State University and a JD in 1973 from the University of New Mexico. He published In the Courts of the Conqueror: The Ten Worst Indian Law Cases Ever Decided in 2010 and In the Light of Justice in 2013. He is a member of the Pawnee Nation.
For more information, contact Noelle Kahanu, assistant specialist in the American studies department, at nmkahanu@hawaii.edu.