We look forward to hosting the first-ever Indigenous Access to Justice Global Conference February 1-3, 2023 at Arizona State University. Around the world, Indigenous people disproportionately contend with complex barriers to accessing justice, such as long-standing socioeconomic marginalization and correspondingly high rates of legal need, but they also hold trusted, timely, and creative alternatives to these issues. We invite you to learn about and discuss this topic with us.
The historic ASU Tempe campus offers first-rate laboratories and facilities. Spaces on campus incorporate the latest technology advancing student learning and innovative new curriculum. The Tempe campus is home to The College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, the Herberger Institute for Design and the Arts and the College of Global Futures.
Bringing together researchers, judges, justice leaders, and frontline justice workers from around the world, this conference will identify and broadly mobilize what access to civil justice means for Indigenous people, building community and enriching emergent access to justice innovations across jurisdictions and geographies.
This 3-day conference is filled with speakers and panels that will spark conversations with your colleagues from around the world. Arizona State University's Memorial Union is our home for this conference, where we will cover topics on justice, gender, indigeneity, access, Indigenous reparations and more.
Professor and Director, School of Social and Family Dynamics, Arizona State University; Faculty Fellow, American Bar Foundation
President-Elect, American Bar Association
Justice, Minnesota Supreme Court