Publication Date
1987
Document Type
Article
Abstract
The Hopi Indians of northeastern Arizona have existed as a stable or steady state society for a thousand years or more, and, even though they have felt the impact of white growth society in this century, they have maintained a greater cultural integrity than any other native people in the United States. This Article examines traditional Hopi values and institutions, especially their law. Hopi thinking and social organization were shaped by a profound reverence for their environment and an equally profound awareness of the constraints it imposed. With its growing sense of a need for balance with the environment, modern America could learn much from the Hopi.
Publication Title
University of Missouri Kansas City Law Review
Volume
55
Issue
3
Recommended Citation
John W. Ragsdale Jr,
The Institutions, Laws and Values of The Hopi Indians: A Stable State Society,
55
University of Missouri Kansas City Law Review
335
(1987).
Available at:
https://irlaw.umkc.edu/faculty_works/617
Included in
Comparative and Foreign Law Commons, Human Rights Law Commons, Indigenous, Indian, and Aboriginal Law Commons, Law and Society Commons, Legal History Commons, Religion Law Commons, Water Law Commons