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Articles 1 - 25 of 25
Full-Text Articles in Law
When A Tribal Entity Becomes A Nation: The Role Of Politics In The Shifting Federal Recognition Regulations, Lorinda Riley
When A Tribal Entity Becomes A Nation: The Role Of Politics In The Shifting Federal Recognition Regulations, Lorinda Riley
American Indian Law Review
Before a tribal entity can exercise the privileges and immunities of external sovereign status, they must first be recognized by the United States. For a variety of reasons, some legitimate tribal entities remain unrecognized today. The Department of the Interior has created a federal acknowledgement process under 25 C.F.R. Part 83, providing a procedure for a petitioning Indian entity to establish federal recognition. Reaching beyond a discussion of the overarching federal acknowledgment process this paper delves into the application of politics on the Department of the Interior’s administrative actions. This article explores how each presidential administration has both shaped and …
A Starving Culture: Alaskan Native Villages’ Fight To Use Traditional Hunting And Fishing Grounds, Jeffrey W. Stowers, Jr.
A Starving Culture: Alaskan Native Villages’ Fight To Use Traditional Hunting And Fishing Grounds, Jeffrey W. Stowers, Jr.
American Indian Law Review
No abstract provided.
The Promise Zone Initiative And Native American Economic Development: Only The First Step Forward Toward The Promise Of A Brighter Future, James Hall
American Indian Law Review
No abstract provided.
A Pretty Smart Answer: Justifying The Secretary Of The Interior’S “Seminole Fix” For The Indian Gaming Regulatory Act, Austin R. Vance
A Pretty Smart Answer: Justifying The Secretary Of The Interior’S “Seminole Fix” For The Indian Gaming Regulatory Act, Austin R. Vance
American Indian Law Review
No abstract provided.
Christman V. Confederated Tribes Of Grand Ronde: A Chapter In The Disenrollment Epidemic, Tabitha Minke
Christman V. Confederated Tribes Of Grand Ronde: A Chapter In The Disenrollment Epidemic, Tabitha Minke
American Indian Law Review
No abstract provided.
Native Americans And The Legalization Of Marijuana: Can The Tribes Turn Another Addiction Into Affluence?, Melinda Smith
Native Americans And The Legalization Of Marijuana: Can The Tribes Turn Another Addiction Into Affluence?, Melinda Smith
American Indian Law Review
No abstract provided.
Tribal Criminal Jurisdiction Beyond Citizenship And Blood, Addie C. Rolnick
Tribal Criminal Jurisdiction Beyond Citizenship And Blood, Addie C. Rolnick
American Indian Law Review
No abstract provided.
Implementing A Greener Redd+ In Black & White: Preserving Wounaan Lands And Culture In Panama With Indigenous-Sensitive Modifications To Redd+, Cindy Campbell
Implementing A Greener Redd+ In Black & White: Preserving Wounaan Lands And Culture In Panama With Indigenous-Sensitive Modifications To Redd+, Cindy Campbell
American Indian Law Review
No abstract provided.
Competing Visions Of Appellate Justice For Indian Country: A United States Court Of Indian Appeals Or An American Indian Supreme Court, Eugene R. Fidell
Competing Visions Of Appellate Justice For Indian Country: A United States Court Of Indian Appeals Or An American Indian Supreme Court, Eugene R. Fidell
American Indian Law Review
No abstract provided.
Human Trafficking Among Native Americans: How Jurisdictional And Statutory Complexities Present Barriers To Combating Modern-Day Slavery, Maggie Logan
American Indian Law Review
No abstract provided.
Winner, Best Appellate Brief In The 2016 Native American Law Student Association Moot Court Competition, Ashley Akers, Maureen Orth
Winner, Best Appellate Brief In The 2016 Native American Law Student Association Moot Court Competition, Ashley Akers, Maureen Orth
American Indian Law Review
No abstract provided.
Defending The Cobell Buy-Back Program, Rebekah Martin
Defending The Cobell Buy-Back Program, Rebekah Martin
American Indian Law Review
No abstract provided.
Capital, Inequality, And Self-Determination: Creating A Sovereign Financial System For Native American Nations, W. Gregory Guedel, Ph.D, J. D. Colbert
Capital, Inequality, And Self-Determination: Creating A Sovereign Financial System For Native American Nations, W. Gregory Guedel, Ph.D, J. D. Colbert
American Indian Law Review
No abstract provided.
Why Indigenous Peoples’ Property Rights Matter: Why The United Nations Declaration On The Rights Of Indigenous Peoples May Be Used To Condemn Isis And The State Of Iraq For Their Failure To Protect The Property Rights Of Indigenous Peoples In The Nineveh Plains, Brooke E. Hamilton
American Indian Law Review
No abstract provided.
Trespass To Culture: The Bioethics Of Indigenous Populations’ Informed Consent In Mainstream Genetic Research Paradigms, Alexandra Winters
Trespass To Culture: The Bioethics Of Indigenous Populations’ Informed Consent In Mainstream Genetic Research Paradigms, Alexandra Winters
American Indian Law Review
No abstract provided.
Intellectual Property Rights And Informed Consent In American Indian Communities: Legal And Ethical Issues, Naomi Palosaari
Intellectual Property Rights And Informed Consent In American Indian Communities: Legal And Ethical Issues, Naomi Palosaari
American Indian Law Review
No abstract provided.
Analysis Of A Bias-Based Exception To The Doctrine Of Exhaustion In Wilson V. Bull, R. Mitchell Mcgrew
Analysis Of A Bias-Based Exception To The Doctrine Of Exhaustion In Wilson V. Bull, R. Mitchell Mcgrew
American Indian Law Review
No abstract provided.
Federal Statutory Responsibility And The Mental Health Crisis Among American Indians, Abilene Slaton
Federal Statutory Responsibility And The Mental Health Crisis Among American Indians, Abilene Slaton
American Indian Law Review
No abstract provided.
The Dynamic Legal Environment Of Daily Fantasy Sports, Elizabeth Lohah Homer
The Dynamic Legal Environment Of Daily Fantasy Sports, Elizabeth Lohah Homer
American Indian Law Review
No abstract provided.
Protecting Tribal Skies: Why Indian Tribes Possess The Sovereign Authority To Regulate Tribal Airspace, William M. Haney
Protecting Tribal Skies: Why Indian Tribes Possess The Sovereign Authority To Regulate Tribal Airspace, William M. Haney
American Indian Law Review
Since the advent of human flight, lawmakers in the United States have struggled to keep pace with advancements in aviation technology. Similarly, many doctrines of federal Indian law that govern the exercise of the sovereign powers of Indian tribes in the United States are based on outmoded conceptions of the capabilities and interests of Indian people and tribal governments. For decades, tribal governments have worked to protect their sovereign interests in tribal territory from the effects of aviation activities that occur within tribal airspace. There has been no exploration of tribal airspace issues in the academic community and limited examination …
The Bureau Of Land Management's Finalized Hydraulic Fracturing Rule On Tribal Lands: A Responsibility Or Intrusion?, Kerstie B. Moran
The Bureau Of Land Management's Finalized Hydraulic Fracturing Rule On Tribal Lands: A Responsibility Or Intrusion?, Kerstie B. Moran
American Indian Law Review
No abstract provided.
Lessons Learned: Avoiding The Hardships Of Tribal Mineral Leasing In The Development Of Oklahoma Tribal Wind Energy, Wyatt Swinford
Lessons Learned: Avoiding The Hardships Of Tribal Mineral Leasing In The Development Of Oklahoma Tribal Wind Energy, Wyatt Swinford
American Indian Law Review
No abstract provided.
Nothing Personal (Or Subject Matter) About It: Jurisdictional Risk As An Impetus For Non-Tribal Opt-Outs From Tribal Economies, And The Need For Administrative Response, Joel Pruett
American Indian Law Review
No abstract provided.
Coalbed Methane Development In Wyoming And Montana: The Potential Impacts Of Montana V. Wyoming, Coalbed Methane Development, And Water Quality On The Tribes Of The Powder River And Wind River Basins, Mallory J. Irwinsky
American Indian Law Review
No abstract provided.
Raising Capital In Indian Country, Evan Way
Raising Capital In Indian Country, Evan Way
American Indian Law Review
No abstract provided.