American Indian Quarterly

In 2026, Center CIRCL and NYU became the proud home of American Indian Quarterly, edited by Simón Ventura Trujillo. American Indian Quarterly has earned its reputation as one of the dominant journals in American Indian studies by presenting the best and most thought-provoking scholarship in the field. AIQ is a forum for diverse voices and perspectives spanning a variety of academic disciplines. The common thread is AIQ’s commitment to publishing work that contributes to the development of American Indian studies as a field and to the sovereignty and continuance of American Indian nations and cultures. In addition to peer-reviewed articles, AIQ features reviews of books, films, and exhibits.

Volume 48, No. 4 (Fall 2024) Open Access

Colonial Etiolo
gy: Globalism and the Debate Between Black and Native American Studies
Chad B. Infante

“Indian Girls Prefer Park to Housework”: Native Labor, Runaways, and Carcerality in the Twentieth-Century San Francisco Bay Area
Caitlin Keliiaa

Why Was the Red in the Rainbow Faded?: American Indian Activists and Multiracial Coalition-Building in the 1968 Poor People’s Campaign
Jonathan Soucek

Volume 48, no. 3 (Summer 2024) Open Access

Indigenous Archaeology Thr
ough Consent, Consensus, and Collaboration
Danny Sosa Aguilar

Native American Spirituality and Eurasian Metaphysics: An Essay in Ceremonial Research
Barry Allen

A Social Biography of Hopi Activist Ernest Naquayouma
Robert Edwards

Volume 48, no. 2 (Spring 2024)

Sitting on the Watcher’s Stage: Networ
ks of Kinship and Sovereignty Among the Corn Rows
Jayne Elizabeth Kinney

Visual Rhetoric and Spatial Sovereignty in Gord Hill’s The 500 Years of Resistance Comic Book
Heather Smyth

Red Codes and Removal: Racial Exclusion and Indigenous Persistence in the Midwest
Stephen Warren