This is a special issue on native feminism entitled Native Feminisms: Legacies, Interventions, and Indigenous Sovereignties. The authors represent a variety of academic disciplines including history, women\u2019s studies, governmental and legal studies, literary studies, American studies, and anthropology. Many of the articles share a common thread in their use of legal analysis pertaining to current issues facing native communities.Elizabeth Cook-Lynn writes an intriguing review of a book published last year by Living Justice Press entitled What does Justice Look Like? The Struggle for liberation in Dakota Homeland. The book addresses the challenges of recognition facing the Dakota community in Minnesota; particularly the Minnesota Historical Society\u2019s resistance of certain terminology relating to the state\u2019s early history.