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Articles 61 - 80 of 80
Full-Text Articles in Law
American Indian Law Review: Purposes And Goals Revisited, Robert A. Fairbanks
American Indian Law Review: Purposes And Goals Revisited, Robert A. Fairbanks
American Indian Law Review
No abstract provided.
Law School Training Of American Indians As Legal-Warriors, Gloria Valencia-Weber
Law School Training Of American Indians As Legal-Warriors, Gloria Valencia-Weber
American Indian Law Review
No abstract provided.
Tribal Water Quality Standards Under The Clean Water Act: Protecting Traditional Cultural Uses, William C. Galloway
Tribal Water Quality Standards Under The Clean Water Act: Protecting Traditional Cultural Uses, William C. Galloway
Washington Law Review
Since 1987, the Clean Water Act has allowed Indian tribes to be treated as states for various purposes under the Act. Among the regulatory powers of states under the Clean Water Act is the ability to set water quality standards, subject to approval by the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA). Upstream pollution dischargers must comply with a downstream state's water quality standards once it is established that an upstream discharge demonstrably impacts downstream water quality. The power to set water quality standards represents a new and potentially powerful tool to protect traditional uses and enhance reservation environments, but only if tribes …
Easements By Necessity: A Threshold For Inholder Access Rights Under The Alaska National Interest Lands Conservation Act, Galen G.B. Schuler
Easements By Necessity: A Threshold For Inholder Access Rights Under The Alaska National Interest Lands Conservation Act, Galen G.B. Schuler
Washington Law Review
Nineteenth Century federal land grants created a legacy of private lands surrounded by federal land in the American West. Owners of such lands (inholders) were routinely granted access across federal land by implicit common law rights until the 1960s when federal land policy became more restrictive. In 1981, the Ninth Circuit held that the Alaska National Interest Lands Conservation Act (ANILCA) provided a statutory entitlement for inholder access. Since then, the Ninth Circuit also has held that ANILCA preempts any common law access rights. This Comment argues that the common law doctrine of easements by necessity remains a threshold basis …
Native American Sovereignty And Treaty Rights: Are They Historical Illusions?, Robert A. Fairbanks
Native American Sovereignty And Treaty Rights: Are They Historical Illusions?, Robert A. Fairbanks
American Indian Law Review
No abstract provided.
The Flathead Water Quality Standards Dispute: Legal Bases For Tribal Regulatory Authority Over Non-Indian Reservation Lands, Daniel I.S.J. Rey-Bear
The Flathead Water Quality Standards Dispute: Legal Bases For Tribal Regulatory Authority Over Non-Indian Reservation Lands, Daniel I.S.J. Rey-Bear
American Indian Law Review
No abstract provided.
Defending The Despised: William Moses Kunstler, Randall Coyne
Defending The Despised: William Moses Kunstler, Randall Coyne
American Indian Law Review
No abstract provided.
Remarks On The Leonard Peltier Case, William M. Kunstler
Remarks On The Leonard Peltier Case, William M. Kunstler
American Indian Law Review
No abstract provided.
Winner, Best Appellate Brief In The 1995 Native American Law Student Association Moot Court Competition, Daniel L. Cheyette, Andrew J. Bobzien
Winner, Best Appellate Brief In The 1995 Native American Law Student Association Moot Court Competition, Daniel L. Cheyette, Andrew J. Bobzien
American Indian Law Review
No abstract provided.
Identity As Idiom: Mashpee Reconsidered, Jo Carrillo
Identity As Idiom: Mashpee Reconsidered, Jo Carrillo
Faculty Scholarship
No abstract provided.
"Constructing" Nation Within States: The Quest For Federal Recognition By The Catawba And Lumbee Tribes, Anne Merline Mcculloch, David E. Wilkins
"Constructing" Nation Within States: The Quest For Federal Recognition By The Catawba And Lumbee Tribes, Anne Merline Mcculloch, David E. Wilkins
Jepson School of Leadership Studies articles, book chapters and other publications
Creating and in some cases re-creating viable tribal political communities within the construct of modern nation-state has proven to be a troublesome task for indigenous populations worldwide. The task for indigenous governments in the United States has been further complication by federalism's divisions of power between the states and the national government. Native American tribes often find themselves waging a two-front battle in which they must resist state encroachments over their lands and their inherent government authority; while at the same time they must lobby the federal government for protection of those same lands and powers.
History is replete with …
The "De-Selected" Senate Committee On Indian Affairs And Its Legislative Record, 1977-1992, David E. Wilkins
The "De-Selected" Senate Committee On Indian Affairs And Its Legislative Record, 1977-1992, David E. Wilkins
Jepson School of Leadership Studies articles, book chapters and other publications
This essay has three major sections. In section one, I examine the Congress's constitutional responsibility for administration of the federal government's affairs with tribes. In section two, I describe the history of the various Indian committees from 1820 to 1977. Section three details the legislative record of the Senate Select Committee during its sixteen-year existence (1977-1993) as a "select" entity. Substantive policy content analysis of the committee's legislative activity, which is the next logical step leading to the construction of a theory or theories about congressional committees and their impact on the development of sound federal Indian policy, must await …
Tribal-State Affairs: The Next Proving Ground?, David E. Wilkins
Tribal-State Affairs: The Next Proving Ground?, David E. Wilkins
Jepson School of Leadership Studies articles, book chapters and other publications
While these more profound issues of structure and perception beg for solution, a more immediate problem has arisen with the advent of Republican dominance in the Congress. One of the likely outgrowths of this transference of political power is that Congress, along with the Supreme Court, which has been doing it for some time, may funnel more issues to the States and their subsidiary governments for resolution or administration. Such a transfer does not bode well for tribes. Remember the allotment of Indian lands (1880s-1930s) and the Termination of tribes (1950s-1960s)? Those policies essentially made tribes and their citizens subject …
A Great Loneliness Of Spirit, Charles F. Wilkinson
Recognizing Indigenous Peoples' Rights In The Americas, Robert Guitteau Jr., Nadia Ezzelarab
Recognizing Indigenous Peoples' Rights In The Americas, Robert Guitteau Jr., Nadia Ezzelarab
Human Rights Brief
No abstract provided.
Canada's Fiduciary Obligation To Aboriginal Peoples In The Context Of Accession To Sovereignty By Quebec, Volume 2: Domestic Dimensions, Renée Dupuis, Kent Mcneil
Canada's Fiduciary Obligation To Aboriginal Peoples In The Context Of Accession To Sovereignty By Quebec, Volume 2: Domestic Dimensions, Renée Dupuis, Kent Mcneil
Books
The Royal Commission on Aboriginal Peoples was established on 26 August 1991 by Order in Council P.C. 1991-1597 with the following mandate: "The Commission of Inquiry should investigate the evolution of the relationship among aboriginal peoples (Indian, Inuit and Métis), the Canadian government, and Canadian society as a whole. It should propose specific solutions, rooted in domestic and international experience, to the problems which have plagued those relationships and which confront aboriginal peoples today. The Commission should examine all issues which it deems to be relevant to any or all of the aboriginal peoples of Canada..." (P.C. 1991-1597)
Regional Agreements For Indigenous Lands And Cultures In Canada, Benjamin J. Richardson, D. Craig, Ben Boer
Regional Agreements For Indigenous Lands And Cultures In Canada, Benjamin J. Richardson, D. Craig, Ben Boer
Commissioned Reports, Studies and Public Policy Documents
No abstract provided.
Chief Justice Rehnquist And The Indian Cases, Ralph W. Johnson, Berrie Martinis
Chief Justice Rehnquist And The Indian Cases, Ralph W. Johnson, Berrie Martinis
Articles
Since his appointment to the United States Supreme Court, Chief Justice William H. Rehnquist has guided significant changes in Indian law. He has articulated new tests for determining the status of tribes and their powers as sovereign nations. He has voted to disestablish tribes and limit their sovereign powers. He has voted to allow states to exercise jurisdiction over Indian and non-Indian activities and property on reservations.
The articulation of a legal philosophy is generally accepted, expected, and probably necessary for a Supreme Court Justice. At the same time it is instructive to know the views of the members of …
Chief Justice Rehnquist And The Indian Cases, Ralph W. Johnson, Berrie Martinis
Chief Justice Rehnquist And The Indian Cases, Ralph W. Johnson, Berrie Martinis
Articles
Since his appointment to the United States Supreme Court, Chief Justice William H. Rehnquist has guided significant changes m Indian law He has articulated new tests for determining the status of tribes and their powers as sovereign nations. He has voted to disestablish tribes and limit their sovereign powers. He has voted to allow states to exercise jurisdiction over Indian and non-Indian activities and property on reservations.
The articulation of a legal philosophy is generally accepted, expected, and probably necessary for a Supreme Court Justice. At the same time it is instructive to know the views of the members of …