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Indigenous, Indian, and Aboriginal Law

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University of New Mexico

Faculty Scholarship

Series

1994

Articles 1 - 2 of 2

Full-Text Articles in Law

Recognizing And Enforcing State And Tribal Judgments: A Round Table Discussion Of Law, Policy And Practice, Christine Zuni Cruz, Mario E. Occhialino Jr., Philip Sam Deloria, Richard E. Ranson Honorable, Robert N. Clinton, Robert Laurence, Nell Jessup Newton Jan 1994

Recognizing And Enforcing State And Tribal Judgments: A Round Table Discussion Of Law, Policy And Practice, Christine Zuni Cruz, Mario E. Occhialino Jr., Philip Sam Deloria, Richard E. Ranson Honorable, Robert N. Clinton, Robert Laurence, Nell Jessup Newton

Faculty Scholarship

Let me begin with a word of introduction. For a long time, we at the American Indian Law Center have been interested in and concerned about the growth and strengthening of tribal governmental institutions. Tribal sovereignty is often talked about in the abstract, but people are somewhat reluctant to deal with the practical issues that are involved when sovereignty is actually exercised: the give and take that governments do all the time in their relationships with each other. We tried to take the leadership a number of years ago in looking at some of the practical issues involved in the …


American Indian Law And History: Instructional Mirrors, Gloria Valencia-Weber Jan 1994

American Indian Law And History: Instructional Mirrors, Gloria Valencia-Weber

Faculty Scholarship

This article is an expanison of a presentation delivered on January 8, 1993 at the Association of American Law Schools annual meeting. The author presents her interdisciplinary approach to teaching a course on Native American Rights.