Labriola's collection provides resources to support ASU student and faculty academic success, including the preservation and curation of Indigenous Knowledge and awareness.
The Labriola National American Indian Data Center Library collection consists of contemporary books written by Indigenous scholars, authors, artists, etc.
The Center's archival collections contain manuscripts, oral stories, Tribal Nation newspapers, microfilm, political papers, photographs, ephemera, and rare and out-of-print books. To view non-circulating materials please make an appointment at least five business days prior to your visit by contacting Ask an Archivist.
Stories of note
Simon J. Ortiz Papers, 1946–1992
The writing, research and correspondence of Indigenous scholar, writer and poet Simon J. Ortiz, a major voice and leading figure in the history of Native American literature. The collection is arranged in 11 series—Writing, Journals, Correspondence, Projects, Pueblo of Acoma Work, Teaching, Research, Miscellaneous, Conferences, Audiovisual and Book Collection—with the bulk of material dating from 1960 to 1992.
Visit the finding aid for the Simon J Ortiz Papers
Trudie Jackson Papers, 2018
The campaign material of Trudie Jackson, the first Navajo transgender women seeking the Nation's highest office. The collection consists of one box—Navajo Nation Presidential Candidate campaign material and forum agendas, invitation letters, Navajo Council Delegate forum, campaign stickers, and travel/rental information—with the bulk of the material dating to 2018.
Labriola Open Stacks
Materials in this collection feature titles either authored by or for Indigenous peoples. All titles promote and support Indigenous academic excellence for all disciplines.
All material can be checked out.