AIS faculty member, Professor Stephanie Fryberg's, article "Reclaiming Representations & Interrupting the Cycle of Bias Against Native Americans" was published in the Spring 2018 issue of Daedalus, the journal of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences. The issue is titled "Unfolding Futures: Indigenous Ways of Knowing in the Twenty-First Century" and features articles by American Indian scholars from across the country.
The abstract for Professor Fryberg's article, written with 2 fellow authors, reads:
The most widely accessible ideas and representations of Native Americans are largely negative, antiquated, and limiting. In this essay, we examine how the prevalence of such representations and a comparative lack of positive contemporary representations foster a cycle of bias that perpetuates disparities among Native Americans and other populations. By focusing on three institutions – the legal system, the media, and education – we illustrate how the same process that creates disparate outcomes can be leveraged to promote positive contemporary ideas and representations of Native Americans, thereby creating more equitable outcomes. We also highlight the actions some contemporary Native Americans have taken to reclaim their Native American identity and create accurate ideas and representations of who Native Americans are and what they can become. These actions provide a blueprint for leveraging cultural change to interrupt the cycle of bias and to reduce the disparities Native Americans face in society.