Anthropology, and the Legacy of The Cheyenne Way

2016 
thropologist ventured together to the Tongue River Reservation in Lame Deer, Montana, to study the legal culture of the Cheyenne. Through the recollections of the elder members of the tribe, the two scholars came to understand how the Cheyenne resolved their social disputes and how they "cleaned up the messes" of homicide, theft, adultery, and the like. The lawyer and anthropologist, having analyzed over 50 "trouble-cases," were astonished by the "juristic beauty" and "legal genius" of Cheyenne dispute resolution. Studying the legal processes of the non-Western "other" exemplified for them the role of law in channeling human behavior and maintaining social cohesion. The Cheyenne had-or so it appeared to the two observers-the unique, problem-solving ability to reconcile general notions of law with the particular dictates of individual justice. The legal academic in charge of the study was Karl N. Llewellyn, the Betts professor of jurispru
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