Viola A. Burnette (1938 - 2016) was born and raised in South Dakota on the Rosebud Reservation. A graduate of the University of New Mexico School of Law, she provided legal services to the Flandreau Santee Sioux Tribe, the Rosebud Sioux Tribe, and others. Burnette was the first attorney general for the Rosebud Sioux Tribe and was part of the South Dakota Coalition against Domestic Violence.
Request Academic Copy
Please copy the ISBN for submitting review copy form
Description
Viola Burnette was a strong Lakota woman with a deep and abiding commitment to her family, to her tribe, and to the importance of law in advancing the future and preserving the values of the past. This is her stirring story in her own words of testimony and witness."" - Frank Pommersheim, author of Broken Landscape: Indians, Indian Tribes, and the Constitution ""While other historical volumes review and analyze the intellectual impacts of government policies on Native American reservation communities, this autobiographical account puts these policies in a personal and integrated context that makes them understandable in a richer and more nuanced way. In this way, the unintended consequences of governmental policies, such as conflicting identities, can be appreciated as a lived reality, rather than an empty abstraction based on government archives and political histories."" - Kathleen Pickering Sherman, author of Lakota Culture, World Economy