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Articles 1 - 30 of 36
Full-Text Articles in Law
Constitutionality Of Reparations For Native Americans: Confronting The Boarding Schools, Monica Shaffer
Constitutionality Of Reparations For Native Americans: Confronting The Boarding Schools, Monica Shaffer
Mitchell Hamline Law Review
No abstract provided.
The Capitalization Of "Tribal Nations" And The Decolonization Of Citation, Nomenclature, And Terminology In The United States, Angelique Eaglewoman
The Capitalization Of "Tribal Nations" And The Decolonization Of Citation, Nomenclature, And Terminology In The United States, Angelique Eaglewoman
Mitchell Hamline Law Review
No abstract provided.
Restorative Justice And The Rights Of Nature: Using Indigenous Legal Traditions To Influence Cultural Change And Promote Environmental Protection, Anne Haluska
Mitchell Hamline Law Review
No abstract provided.
Trailblazing And Living A Purposeful Life In The Law: A Dakota Woman's Reflections As A Law Professor, Angelique Eaglewoman
Trailblazing And Living A Purposeful Life In The Law: A Dakota Woman's Reflections As A Law Professor, Angelique Eaglewoman
Faculty Scholarship
This Essay is a reflection from my perspective as a Dakota woman law professor on my fifth law school faculty. In the illuminating work of Meera Deo, light is shone on the experience of women of color legal academics. Unequal Profession: Race and Gender in Legal Academia is a book that should be required reading at every law school. As women of color are faculty members in every law school in the United States, the research, analysis, and recommendations tailored to the experience of women of color law faculty should be a priority topic in those same law schools. As …
Some Reflections Of A Métis Law Student And Assistant Professor On Indigenous Legal Education In Canada, Scott Franks
Some Reflections Of A Métis Law Student And Assistant Professor On Indigenous Legal Education In Canada, Scott Franks
Mitchell Hamline Law Review
No abstract provided.
Storytelling And Truth-Telling: Personal Reflections On The Native American Experience In Law Schools, Angelique Eaglewoman, Dominic J. Terry, Lani Petrulo, Dr. Gavin Clarkson, Angela Levasseur, Leah R. Sixkiller, Jack Rice
Storytelling And Truth-Telling: Personal Reflections On The Native American Experience In Law Schools, Angelique Eaglewoman, Dominic J. Terry, Lani Petrulo, Dr. Gavin Clarkson, Angela Levasseur, Leah R. Sixkiller, Jack Rice
Mitchell Hamline Law Review
No abstract provided.
How To Be Biased In The Classroom: Kwayeskastasowin - Setting Things Right?, Jaime M.N. Lavallee
How To Be Biased In The Classroom: Kwayeskastasowin - Setting Things Right?, Jaime M.N. Lavallee
Mitchell Hamline Law Review
No abstract provided.
Permanent Homelands Through Treaties With The United States: Restoring Faith In The Tribal Nation-U.S. Relationship In Light Of The Mcgirt Decision, Angelique Eaglewoman
Permanent Homelands Through Treaties With The United States: Restoring Faith In The Tribal Nation-U.S. Relationship In Light Of The Mcgirt Decision, Angelique Eaglewoman
Mitchell Hamline Law Review
No abstract provided.
Jurisprudence And Recommendations For Tribal Court Authority Due To Imposition Of U.S. Limitations, Angelique Eaglewoman
Jurisprudence And Recommendations For Tribal Court Authority Due To Imposition Of U.S. Limitations, Angelique Eaglewoman
Mitchell Hamline Law Review
No abstract provided.
Envisioning Indigenous Community Courts To Realize Justice In Canada For First Nations, Angelique Eaglewoman
Envisioning Indigenous Community Courts To Realize Justice In Canada For First Nations, Angelique Eaglewoman
Faculty Scholarship
Through European colonization in North America, the time-honored rule of law, or good way of life, in Indigenous communities was displaced with external forums and processes, primarily from the British juridical traditions. In contemporary Canada, the use of external laws as a tool of colonization and the injustice experienced by Aboriginal peoples in Canadian courts has been the focus of media attention, policy papers, and legal reports for decades. The Canadian justice system is viewed by many as external and a means of subjugation for First Nation, Métis and Inuit peoples. As the Canadian government has attempted to come to …
The Causal Effect: Implications Of Chronic Underfunding In School Systems On The Navajo Reservation, Adriana M. Orman
The Causal Effect: Implications Of Chronic Underfunding In School Systems On The Navajo Reservation, Adriana M. Orman
Mitchell Hamline Law Journal of Public Policy and Practice
No abstract provided.
Don't Chase Your Losses: Online Gambling Regulation And Solutions In Minnesota, Samuel E. Mogensen
Don't Chase Your Losses: Online Gambling Regulation And Solutions In Minnesota, Samuel E. Mogensen
Mitchell Hamline Law Review
No abstract provided.
Traditional Problems: How Tribal Same-Sex Marriage Bans Threaten Tribal Sovereignty, Marcia Zug
Traditional Problems: How Tribal Same-Sex Marriage Bans Threaten Tribal Sovereignty, Marcia Zug
Mitchell Hamline Law Review
No abstract provided.
Affirming A Pragmatic Development Of Tribal Jurisprudential Principles, Todd R. Matha
Affirming A Pragmatic Development Of Tribal Jurisprudential Principles, Todd R. Matha
Mitchell Hamline Law Review
No abstract provided.
“Animals May Take Pity On Us”: Using Traditional Tribal Beliefs To Address Animal Abuse And Family Violence Within Tribal Nations, Sarah Deer, Liz Murphy
“Animals May Take Pity On Us”: Using Traditional Tribal Beliefs To Address Animal Abuse And Family Violence Within Tribal Nations, Sarah Deer, Liz Murphy
Mitchell Hamline Law Review
No abstract provided.
Close To Zero: The Reliance On Minimum Blood Quantum Requirements To Eliminate Tribal Citizenship In The Allotment Acts And The Post-Adoptive Couple Challenges To The Constitutionality Of Icwa, Abi Fain, Mary Kathryn Nagle
Close To Zero: The Reliance On Minimum Blood Quantum Requirements To Eliminate Tribal Citizenship In The Allotment Acts And The Post-Adoptive Couple Challenges To The Constitutionality Of Icwa, Abi Fain, Mary Kathryn Nagle
Mitchell Hamline Law Review
No abstract provided.
From Dysfunction And Polarization To Legislation: Native American Religious Freedom Rights And Minnesota Autopsy Law, Gail T. Kulick, Tadd M. Johnson, Rebecca St. George, Emily Segar-Johnson
From Dysfunction And Polarization To Legislation: Native American Religious Freedom Rights And Minnesota Autopsy Law, Gail T. Kulick, Tadd M. Johnson, Rebecca St. George, Emily Segar-Johnson
Mitchell Hamline Law Review
No abstract provided.
I Can See Clearly Now: The Epa's Authority To Regulate Indian Country Under The Clean Air Act, Richard Duncan, Christiana Martenson
I Can See Clearly Now: The Epa's Authority To Regulate Indian Country Under The Clean Air Act, Richard Duncan, Christiana Martenson
William Mitchell Law Review
No abstract provided.
Redd+: Climate Justice Or A New Face Of Manifest Destiny? Lessons Drawn From The Indigenous Struggle To Resist Colonization Of Ojibwe Forests In The Nineteenth And Twentieth Centuries, Philomena Kebec
William Mitchell Law Review
No abstract provided.
Climate Change Adaptation In Indian Country: Tribal Regulation Of Reservation Lands And Natural Resources, Jamie Kay Ford, Erick Giles
Climate Change Adaptation In Indian Country: Tribal Regulation Of Reservation Lands And Natural Resources, Jamie Kay Ford, Erick Giles
William Mitchell Law Review
No abstract provided.
Tribal Strategies For Protecting And Preserving Groundwater, Stephen V. Quesenberry, Timothy C. Seward, Adam P. Bailey
Tribal Strategies For Protecting And Preserving Groundwater, Stephen V. Quesenberry, Timothy C. Seward, Adam P. Bailey
William Mitchell Law Review
No abstract provided.
Tribal Authority To Protect Water Resources And Reserved Rights Under Clean Water Act Section 401, Paula Goodman Maccabee
Tribal Authority To Protect Water Resources And Reserved Rights Under Clean Water Act Section 401, Paula Goodman Maccabee
William Mitchell Law Review
No abstract provided.
Toward Genuine Tribal Consultation In The 21st Century, Colette Routel, Jeffrey K. Holth
Toward Genuine Tribal Consultation In The 21st Century, Colette Routel, Jeffrey K. Holth
Faculty Scholarship
The tribal right to consultation requires the federal government to consult with Indian tribes prior to the approval of any federal project, regulation, or agency policy. This article, which provides the first comprehensive analysis of this right, highlights the current inconsistencies in interpretation and application of the consultation duty. It then attempts to provide suggestions for changes that can be implemented by the legislative, executive or judicial branches.
In Part I, we provide a brief overview of the development of the trust responsibility and explain how it came to include three substantive duties: to provide services to tribal members, to …
Muscogee Constitutional Jurisprudence: Vhakv Em Pvtakv (The Carpet Under The Law), Sarah Deer, Cecilia Knapp
Muscogee Constitutional Jurisprudence: Vhakv Em Pvtakv (The Carpet Under The Law), Sarah Deer, Cecilia Knapp
Faculty Scholarship
In 1974, a group of Mvskoke citizens from Oklahoma sued the federal government in federal court. Hanging in the balance was the future of Mvskoke self-determination. The plaintiffs insisted that their 1867 Constitution remained in full effect, and that they still governed themselves pursuant to it. The United States argued that the constitution had been nullified by federal law passed in the early 1900s.
To find in favor of the plaintiffs, the court would have to rule that the United States had been ignoring the most basic civil rights of Mvskoke citizens and flouting the law for over seventy years. …
Criminal Justice In Indian Country, Sarah Deer
Criminal Justice In Indian Country, Sarah Deer
Faculty Scholarship
On March 7,2013, President Obama signed the 2013 Violence Against Women Act Re-authorization ("VAWA 2013"). Contained within that legislation is a partial re-authorization of tribal criminal jurisdiction over non-Indians, which is a topic covered in this short article. VAWA 2013 recognizes that the inherent right of tribal nations includes criminal jurisdiction over non-Indian defendants accused of domestic violence. The topics discussed in this article-statistical evidence, interdiction of violence, and protecting Native women-will likely become even more important as tribal leaders and jurists consider the future of tribal self-determination and seek to realize the full potential of the changes created by …
Dakota Tribal Courts In Minnesota: Benchmarks Of Self-Determination, Sarah Deer, John E. Jacobson
Dakota Tribal Courts In Minnesota: Benchmarks Of Self-Determination, Sarah Deer, John E. Jacobson
Faculty Scholarship
Professor Frank Pommersheim has written that “[t]ribal courts are the front line institutions that most often confront issues of American Indian self-determination and sovereignty.”1 It is only fitting, then, that an issue devoted to the legal history and survival of Dakota people includes some information about the role Dakota tribal courts play in furthering the aims of self-determination. Of the over 565 federally recognized tribes in the United States, most operate some form of dispute resolution or judicial system—and all have distinct, unique histories and stories.2 Little has been written about the Dakota legal systems, and it is in the …
Minnesota Bounties On Dakota Men During The U.S.-Dakota War, Colette Routel
Minnesota Bounties On Dakota Men During The U.S.-Dakota War, Colette Routel
Faculty Scholarship
The U.S.-Dakota War was one of the formative events in Minnesota history, and despite the passage of time, it still stirs up powerful emotions among descendants of the Dakota and white settlers who experienced this tragedy. Hundreds of people lost their lives in just over a month of fighting in 1862. By the time the year was over, thirty-eight Dakota men had been hanged in the largest mass execution in United States history. Not long afterwards, the United States abrogated its treaties with the Dakota, confiscated their reservations along the Minnesota River, and forced most of the Dakota to remove …
Garden Of Truth, Sarah Deer
Garden Of Truth, Sarah Deer
Faculty Scholarship
On Oct. 27, 2011, a report entitled “Garden of Truth: The Prostitution and Trafficking of Native Women in Minnesota” was released in St. Paul, Minn. The report was the culmination of a three-year research project conducted in Minnesota by two nonprofit organizations: the Minnesota Indian Women’s Sexual Assault Coalition, a grassroots organization of Native American women that is based in St. Paul and focuses on outreach and awareness for survivors of sexual assault, and Prostitution Research and Education, a nonprofit organization based in San Francisco. This unique collaboration between advocates of Native American women and social scientists has produced a …
Relocation Revisited: Sex Trafficking Of Native Women In The United States, Sarah Deer
Relocation Revisited: Sex Trafficking Of Native Women In The United States, Sarah Deer
Faculty Scholarship
The Trafficking Victim Protection Act of 2000 (TVPA) signaled a comprehensive campaign by the United States (US) government to address the scourge of human trafficking in the US and abroad. The US rhetoric about sex trafficking suggests that the problem originates in foreign countries and/or is recent problem. Neither claim is correct. This article details the historical and legal context of sex trafficking from its origin among the colonial predecessors of the US and documents the commercial trafficking of Native women over several centuries. Native women have experienced generations of enslavement, exploitation, exportation, and relocation. Human trafficking is not just …
Cultural And Economic Self-Determination For Tribal Peoples In The United States Supported By The Un Declaration On The Rights Of Indigenous Peoples, Angelique Eaglewoman
Cultural And Economic Self-Determination For Tribal Peoples In The United States Supported By The Un Declaration On The Rights Of Indigenous Peoples, Angelique Eaglewoman
Faculty Scholarship
No abstract provided.