People do not normally associate cities with Indian reservations. The mental images typically conjured by each term are radically different. Perhaps for that reason, few think of city governments and tribal governments in similar terms.However, the two forms of government - cities and Indian reservations - have many things in common. Both are excluded from the federal constitutional framework. Both are subject to the plenary power of one of the constitutionally recognized governments - cities to the state government, tribes to the federal government. Both are the most intimate form of government with which most of their residents are familiar.More importantly, cities and tribes both have the potential to perform a role that neither national...
The capacity of Indian tribal sovereignty to protect tribes from outside encroachment and interferen...
This Article will demonstrate that virtually all elements of Indian affairs can be traced to the dec...
The author examines the three areas of law, tribal power, state jurisdiction, and equal protection, ...
People do not normally associate cities with Indian reservations. The mental images typically conjur...
Federal law about Indian tribes tends to be considered separately from the body of law about federal...
This Article argues that current Supreme Court reasoning concerning the reserved powers of state gov...
This article critiques the contemporary doctrine of Indian tribal self-determination thirty years af...
The U.S. Constitution grants the federal government plenary power over American Indian affairs, yet ...
This Article explores a radical method under the U.S. Constitution for devolving extraordinary polit...
This article considers tribal, state, and federal cooperation to achieve good governance. Part II di...
This Article attempts to place the current controversy concerning reservation gaming into perspectiv...
This article will analyze recent legislative efforts. The first section of the article examines the ...
Courts address equal protection questions about the distinct legal treatment of American Indian trib...
American Indian tribes once operated regional trade centers, with broad geographical impact. With th...
American Indian reservations are the poorest parts of the United States, and a higher percentage of ...
The capacity of Indian tribal sovereignty to protect tribes from outside encroachment and interferen...
This Article will demonstrate that virtually all elements of Indian affairs can be traced to the dec...
The author examines the three areas of law, tribal power, state jurisdiction, and equal protection, ...
People do not normally associate cities with Indian reservations. The mental images typically conjur...
Federal law about Indian tribes tends to be considered separately from the body of law about federal...
This Article argues that current Supreme Court reasoning concerning the reserved powers of state gov...
This article critiques the contemporary doctrine of Indian tribal self-determination thirty years af...
The U.S. Constitution grants the federal government plenary power over American Indian affairs, yet ...
This Article explores a radical method under the U.S. Constitution for devolving extraordinary polit...
This article considers tribal, state, and federal cooperation to achieve good governance. Part II di...
This Article attempts to place the current controversy concerning reservation gaming into perspectiv...
This article will analyze recent legislative efforts. The first section of the article examines the ...
Courts address equal protection questions about the distinct legal treatment of American Indian trib...
American Indian tribes once operated regional trade centers, with broad geographical impact. With th...
American Indian reservations are the poorest parts of the United States, and a higher percentage of ...
The capacity of Indian tribal sovereignty to protect tribes from outside encroachment and interferen...
This Article will demonstrate that virtually all elements of Indian affairs can be traced to the dec...
The author examines the three areas of law, tribal power, state jurisdiction, and equal protection, ...