The National Indian Law Library (NILL) of the Native American Rights Fund is a law library devoted to federal Indian and tribal law. NILL maintains a unique and valuable collection of Indian law resources and assists people with their Indian law-related research needs. You can find some of our most popular resources below.

The American Indian Library Association (AILA) is a membership action group that addresses the library-related needs of American Indians and Alaska Natives. Members are individuals and institutions interested in the development of programs to improve Indian library, cultural, and informational services in school, public, and research libraries on reservations. AILA is also committed to disseminating information about Indian cultures, languages, values, and information needs to the library community. AILA cosponsors an annual conference and holds a yearly business meeting in conjunction with the American Library Association annual meeting. It publishes the American Indian Libraries Newsletter, which appears in four issues per year.


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AILA was founded in 1979 in conjunction with the White House Pre-Conference on Indian Library and Information Services on or near Reservations. At the time, there was increasing awareness that library services for Native Americans were inadequate. Individuals as well as the government began to organize to remedy the situation.

Spokane Public Library is committed to providing equal access to its facilities, programs, and services for disabled people. Individuals requesting reasonable accommodations or further information may call, write, or email Human Resources at 509-444-5308, 906 W. Main Ave, Spokane, WA, 99201; or spokanelibrary.org/contact. Deaf people or individuals who are hard of hearing may contact us for use of assisted listening devices in library meeting rooms. Please contact us forty-eight (48) hours before the meeting date.

The Labriola National American Indian Data Center is an Indigenous-led library center where students and community members can celebrate and critically engage with American Indian and Indigenous scholarly works and creative writing. Its staff provides culturally relevant information and research support, and the center is a culturally safe learning space for Indigenous library users.

Labriola staff seeks to engage with the ASU and local community in meaningful ways through Indigenous librarianship. Labriola staff encourages community members, Indigenous ASU students, faculty and staff to visit their centers at Hayden and Fletcher libraries. For research assistance and collaboration at both campuses or virtually, you can request an appointment with Labriola librarians at labriola@asu.edu.

To view what programs are taking place, please see their events calendar. If you would like to collaborate and create an event at one of the centers, please contact their program coordinators directly or request an appointment.

*Closed on holidays

*Occasional exceptions to hours will be posted on the library door, or noted on our website. Requesting a special appointment or calling with a question is always welcome. 310-206-7510

The American Indian Studies Center Library is a focused special collection of books, journals, newspapers, and other core materials of importance to the study of American Indian peoples. The collection contains a wide range of subjects, including history, law, social relations, expressive arts, languages and literature.

The library maintains a collection of core published materials of importance to the study of American Indian, Native Hawaiian, and native Alaska peoples, primarily those residing within the borders of the United States.

Everyone is welcome to use the collections in the AISC Library during the hours the library is open. From time to time the library staff may need to be away from the library during normal operating hours, and so we suggest you call before you come. Parking on campus costs for the day, although there are also timed, metered parking spaces. For information about parking on the UCLA campus please see -parking/visitors. If you arrive at a UCLA Parking Services kiosk, we suggest requesting parking in Structure 3, if available, and ask for a campus map with Campbell Hall circled.

The AISC Library is a non-circulating collection. Circulating copies of many items in the AISC Library are often available in one of the units of the UCLA Library. For information about borrowing materials from the UCLA Library, please see its Loan Period and associated web pages.

The California Indian Library Collections has collected, duplicated, assembled, and shipped more than 11,000 textual documents, nearly 25,000 photographs, and over 3,400 audio tapes. There is reward and satisfaction in having prepared over 17,000 manuscript pages for finding guides to the collections and publishing these in 44 volumes. Now a Native Californian in a remote area of northern California may find a photograph of his or her grandmother or hear, for the first time, his grandfather sing or tell a story. Researchers in rural areas are using the collections for legal defense as well as research material for documentation of an important period in California history.

The California Indian Library Collections (CILC) was funded from 1988 through 1994 by the federal Library Services and Construction Act, administered by the California State Library in Sacramento. CILC is now located at the Ethnic Studies Library in the Native American Studies collection at the University of California, Berkeley. In 1987, Gary Strong, the California State Librarian, recognized the growing needs of the state's underserved communities as well as the steady growth of a diverse population. At that time he called for a "rethinking of public library services, a broadening of awareness and valuing of the diversity of the people that compose and will compose California." The California Indian Library Collections project was funded as an adjunct to this vision with the aim of returning unique cultural materials to Native Americans and making the collections available to all citizens through their local libraries.

The Ethnic Studies Library is the departmental library of the Department of Ethnic Studies. It was established in 1997 by merging the Asian American Studies Library, the Chicano Studies Library, and the Native American Studies Library. Since the founding of the Department in 1969, the collections of these libraries grew from student interest in collecting and preserving a perspective by and for racialized communities that they saw as lacking or marginalized in other campus libraries. The specialized ethnic studies books and serials, archival collections, posters, and audio collections from those three libraries live on in a centralized space on the ground floor of Stephens Hall, a short walk from Barrows Hall. The library consists of these four collections: Asian American Studies Collection; Chicano Studies Collection; Native American Studies Collection; Comparative Ethnic Studies Collection. In addition to our collections, the ESL regularly hosts events, ESL librarians provide reference and instruction for the department and larger campus community, and takes recommendations on purchasing books in the field of Ethnic Studies.

The California Indian Library Collections Project is now located at the Ethnic Studies Library, Native American Studies Collection, 30 Stephens Hall, U.C. Berkeley, 94720. Continuing bibliographies are not currently under development. The collection is available to researchers.

The California Indian Library Collections (CILC) was funded from 1988 through 1994 by the federal Library Services and Construction Act, administered by the California State Library in Sacramento. CILC is now located at the Native American Studies Library, University of California, Berkeley. In 1987, Gary Strong, the California State Librarian, recognized the growing needs of the state's underserved communities as well as the steady growth of a diverse population. At that time he called for a "rethinking of public library services, a broadening of awareness and valuing of the diversity of the people that compose and will compose California." The California Indian Library Collections project was funded as an adjunct to this vision with the aim of returning unique cultural materials to Native Americans and making the collections available to all citizens through their local libraries.

Few specialists in the cultural materials exist outside major museums and universities, and research on California's Native Americans has been mostly published in obscure scholarly sources. To make the resources collected by scholars and housed in archives at the University of California, Berkeley available to the public, an alliance was formed between the California State Library (CSL) and the Hearst Museum.

Collections composed of copies of unpublished manuscripts and field notes, obscure scholarly articles, turn-of-the-century photographs as well as rare sound recordings of songs and dances were placed in county libraries. Each CILC county collection reflects the culture of the particular Native American tribal units who live, or lived, in that county. A composite set was installed in the California Room of the California State Library. Finding guides to assist in accessing the collections were published and are currently available through the California Indian Library Collections or the California State Library Foundation. The composite set, Finding Guide to the California Indian Library Collections: California State Library, is available at 110 depository libraries throughout the state. Rancherias and reservation tribal houses were also given finding guides pertaining to their geographic region. For reference, a correlation of tribal units by county and county by tribal unit was prepared. A listing of addresses of the county libraries where CILC collections are located may be found in the document "Libraries Where California Indian Library Collections Are Located." 152ee80cbc

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