View Professor Tweedy's research: SSRN Author page -- Ann E. Tweedy
View Professor Tweedy's CV: Ann Tweedy CV
Ann Tweedy is an Assistant Professor at Hamline University School of Law. She previously served as a Visiting Assistant Professor at Michigan State University College of Law and a Fellow at California Western School of Law. After clerking for Judge Gould of the United States Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit and Judge Armstrong of the Oregon Court of Appeals, she worked for several years representing Indian tribes, first as in-house counsel for the Swinomish Indian Tribal Community and then as an Associate at Kanji & Katzen, PLLC. Her practice primarily centered on environmental and natural resources law. She has written extensively on tribal sovereignty under federal law and also writes on tribal law and sexuality and the law. In addition to her work as a scholar, she is also a poet and essayist.
Professor Tweedy received her J.D. degree from University of California, Berkeley School of Law (Boalt Hall), where she was inducted into the Order of the Coif, and her A.B. degree from Bryn Mawr College, where she majored in English and Philosophy. She is a peer reviewer for the Journal of Homosexuality and a contributing editor for the Federal Bar Association’s Indian Law Section newsletter. Her primary teaching areas are Property, Federal Indian Law, and Gender, Sexuality, and Law. She is admitted to the bars of Washington and California (inactive); and she is of counsel to Kanji & Katzen, PLLC in Seattle.