David Myer Temin is assistant professor of political science and on the faculty in Native American Studies at the University of Michigan-Ann Arbor.
"""An expansive intellectual history, David Temin's Remapping Sovereignty explores a Native American tradition that questions some of the Western world's most basic assumptions about power, authority, and the state. As a deep analysis of this tradition, it makes a valuable contribution to the expert conversation about decolonial movements and explores alternatives to power as the dominant form of political organization."" * World History Encyclopedia * ""Remapping Sovereignty is focused on six Indigenous [leaders, activists, intellectuals, and theorists] who were active in the twentieth century in the settler colonial societies of Canada and United States. . . .In doing so, Temin aptly describes aspects of historical and contemporaneous social context associated with each theorist, including treaties; settler state citizenship; termination policy; the African American civil rights movement focused on individual integrationist inclusion in the settler state; the Canadian multicultural approach; capitalism, white supremacy, and patriarchy; 'Third World' anticolonialism, decolonization, and socialism; and relations between radical Indigenous activists and established Indigenous nations."" * Ethnic and Racial Studies * ""Remapping Sovereignty places Indigenous anticolonial thought at the center of twentieth century global struggles over nation-state, political economy, and international order. Through a beautiful synthesis of political theory and history, Temin not only powerfully reconceives classic debates but he also demonstrates the essential conceptual importance of North American Indigenous arguments for making sense of the past and future of the decolonial project. The result is a truly innovative work of political reconstruction, with critical insights for both scholars and activists."" -- Aziz Rana | author of ""The Constitutional Bind"""