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- Indigenous land claims (3)
- Tribal sovereignty (3)
- Assimilation (2)
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- State courts (2)
- Water rights (2)
- Aamodt (1)
- Alex White Plume (1)
- American Convention of Human Rights (1)
- Ancestral lands (1)
- Aroostook Band of Micmacs v. Ryan (1)
- Assimilationist policies (1)
- Bright-line rule (1)
- Cobell settlement (1)
- Cobell v. Babbitt (1)
- Cobell v. Salazar (1)
- Controlled Substances Act of 1970 (1)
- Cultural defense (1)
- Cultural differences (1)
- Cultural privacy (1)
- DOMA (1)
- Defense of Marriage Act (1)
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- Ethnocentric prejudice (1)
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- Federal Indian law (1)
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Articles 1 - 15 of 15
Full-Text Articles in Law
Introduction To The Iachr Report On Indigenous And Tribal Peoples' Rights Over Their Ancestral Lands And Natural Resources: Norms And Jurisprudence Of The Inter-American Human Rights System, Taiawagi Helton
American Indian Law Review
No abstract provided.
A Reason To Revisit Maine's Indian Claims Settlement Acts: The United Nations Declaration On The Rights Of Indigenous Peoples, Nicole Friederichs
A Reason To Revisit Maine's Indian Claims Settlement Acts: The United Nations Declaration On The Rights Of Indigenous Peoples, Nicole Friederichs
American Indian Law Review
No abstract provided.
Time To Bury The Tomahawk Chop: An Attempt To Reconcile The Differing Viewpoints Of Native Americans And Sports Fans, Justin P. Grose
Time To Bury The Tomahawk Chop: An Attempt To Reconcile The Differing Viewpoints Of Native Americans And Sports Fans, Justin P. Grose
American Indian Law Review
No abstract provided.
This Land Is Your Land, This Land Is My Land? Why The Cobell Settlement Will Not Resolve Indian Land Fractionation, Jered T. Davidson
This Land Is Your Land, This Land Is My Land? Why The Cobell Settlement Will Not Resolve Indian Land Fractionation, Jered T. Davidson
American Indian Law Review
No abstract provided.
Defending The "Indefensible": Replacing Ethnocentrism With A Native American Cultural Defense, Megan H. Dearth
Defending The "Indefensible": Replacing Ethnocentrism With A Native American Cultural Defense, Megan H. Dearth
American Indian Law Review
No abstract provided.
Enough Rope: Why United States V. White Plume Was Wrong On Hemp And Treaty Rights, And What It Could Cost The Federal Government, Lori Murphy
American Indian Law Review
No abstract provided.
Osage Nation V. Irby: The Tenth Circuit Disregards Legal Precedent To Strip Osage County Of Its Reservation Status, Barbara Moschovidis
Osage Nation V. Irby: The Tenth Circuit Disregards Legal Precedent To Strip Osage County Of Its Reservation Status, Barbara Moschovidis
American Indian Law Review
No abstract provided.
Preserving Indian Preference For Native American Self-Governance, Freya Ray
Preserving Indian Preference For Native American Self-Governance, Freya Ray
American Indian Law Review
No abstract provided.
Yours, Mine, Ours? Renovating The Antiquated Apartheid In The Law Of Property Division In Native American Divorce, Vickie Enis
Yours, Mine, Ours? Renovating The Antiquated Apartheid In The Law Of Property Division In Native American Divorce, Vickie Enis
American Indian Law Review
No abstract provided.
Self Interested: Protecting The Cultural And Religious Privacy Of Native Americans Through The Promotion Of Property Rights In Biological Materials, Kimberly Self
American Indian Law Review
No abstract provided.
Changed Embraces, Changes Embraced? Renouncing The Heterosexist Majority In Favor Of A Return To Traditional Two-Spirit Culture, Trista Wilson
Changed Embraces, Changes Embraced? Renouncing The Heterosexist Majority In Favor Of A Return To Traditional Two-Spirit Culture, Trista Wilson
American Indian Law Review
No abstract provided.
Creating Bright-Line Rules For Tribal Court Jurisdiction Over Non-Indians: The Case Of Trespass To Real Property, Grant Christensen
Creating Bright-Line Rules For Tribal Court Jurisdiction Over Non-Indians: The Case Of Trespass To Real Property, Grant Christensen
American Indian Law Review
The 2010 passage of the Tribal Law and Order Act will invest significantly more resources in tribal courts. As tribal courts expand, conflicts between sovereignties - tribal, state, and federal - are likely to occur with much greater frequency. Tribal court civil jurisdiction over non-Indians will be among the issues most frequently appealed to federal courts. I offer this piece to propose a new and novel solution - that tribal courts, through a piecemeal process, be extended absolute civil jurisdiction over non-Indians for those civil offenses over which tribes have the greatest interest. This article takes one of the most …
Protecting Pocahontas's World: The Mattaponi Tribe's Struggle Against Virginia's King William Reservoir Project, Allison M. Dussias
Protecting Pocahontas's World: The Mattaponi Tribe's Struggle Against Virginia's King William Reservoir Project, Allison M. Dussias
American Indian Law Review
No abstract provided.
Five Tribes' Water Rights: Examining The Aamodt Adjudications' Mechem Doctrine To Predict Tribal Water Rights Litigation Outcomes In Oklahoma, Taylor Henderson
Five Tribes' Water Rights: Examining The Aamodt Adjudications' Mechem Doctrine To Predict Tribal Water Rights Litigation Outcomes In Oklahoma, Taylor Henderson
American Indian Law Review
No abstract provided.
Indigenous And Tribal Peoples' Rights Over Their Ancestral Lands And Natural Resources: Norms And Jurisprudence Of The Inter-American Human Rights System, Inter-American Commission On Human Rights
Indigenous And Tribal Peoples' Rights Over Their Ancestral Lands And Natural Resources: Norms And Jurisprudence Of The Inter-American Human Rights System, Inter-American Commission On Human Rights
American Indian Law Review
No abstract provided.