Dani Delaney

Dani Delaney

Assistant Professor

They/Them

PhD Political Science (University of Wisconsin-Madison)

Political Studies

Comparative Politics, Political Theory

Assistant Professor

dd123@queensu.ca

Mackintosh-Corry Hall, C411

People Directory Affiliation Category

Research Interests

Indigenous politics, indigenous rights, sovereignty movements, federal Indian law, Russian politics, legal theory, comparative political theory, comparative politics

Brief Biography

Dani Delaney's research centers on the legal discourse of indigeneity and the politics of recognition through a comparative analysis of the legal strategies of American Indians/Alaska Natives and the indigenous peoples of northern Russia (泻芯褉械薪薪褘械 屑邪谢芯褔懈褋谢械薪薪褘械 薪邪褉芯写褘 小懈斜懈褉懈). Their fieldwork focuses on indigenous political protection and legal challenges to oil development on indigenous lands. They teach indigenous politics, constitutional law, and political theory. They are also the advisor for the Undergraduate Moot Court Team.

Before returning to graduate school They were the legislative director for the National Council of Urban Indian Health and legal counsel to the Tribal Technical Advisory Group to the Centers of Medicaid and Medicare (TTAG: CMS). They received their JD from Georgetown University Law Center with a focus on legislative advocacy and were Georgetown Women鈥檚 Law and Public Policy Fellow.

Recent publications include 鈥淯nder Coyote鈥檚 Mask: Environmental Law, Indigenous Identity, and #NoDAPL鈥 in the Spring 2019 volume of the Michigan Journal of Race & Law.

Teaching

For detailed information about political studies courses and instructors, please refer to the Undergraduate and Graduate pages. 

Service (2024/2025)

  • Departmental Committee
  • Library Representative

Selected Publications

鈥淯nder Coyote鈥檚 Mask: Environmental Law, Indigenous Identity, and #NoDAPL鈥 Michigan Journal of Race and Law 25(2) 2019

鈥淭he Master's Tools: Tribal Sovereignty and Tribal Self-Governance Contracting/Compacting鈥 American Indian Law Journal 5(2) 2017