Conflicts over the jurisdiction between tribal, state, and federal courts arise regularly due to the nature of overlapping sovereignty. The Supreme Court accepts an average of almost three Indian law cases a year and has decided more than twenty Indian law cases with a jurisdictional focus since 1978. As tribes become wealthier, they are increasingly acquiring new lands outside of their existing reservations. This expansion of territory generates new border zones where state and tribal interests converge. The Sixth Circuit recently decided the first federal appellate case dealing with the inherent criminal powers of tribal court jurisdiction over the conduct of Indians on tribal land that is located outside of the tribe’s reservation. The u...
The thesis of this article is that by examining Federal Indian Law one better understands that the A...
No other branch of any government at any level in the United States faces the same sorts of unique c...
This Article explains a longstanding problem in federal Indian law. For two centuries, the U.S. Supr...
Conflicts over the jurisdiction between tribal, state, and federal courts arise regularly due to the...
The boundaries of modern tribal criminal jurisdiction are defined by a handful of clear rules—such a...
Oliphant, the first attempt in recent case law to deal directly with the issue of tribal criminal ju...
Throughout most of the history of federal Indian law, the United States Supreme Court has expressed ...
The 2010 passage of the Tribal Law and Order Act will invest significantly more resources in tribal ...
This Note examines the issue of tribal court jurisdiction over cases in which both Indians and non-I...
In 1978 the Supreme Court in Oliphant v. Suquamish Indian Tribe held that the retained sovereignty ...
This Note argues that the current federal laws regarding tribal criminal jurisdiction are contrary t...
This Article explores the consequences of an anomaly in the Supreme Court’s Indian law jurisprudence...
Unlike most sovereigns, American Indian tribes cannot exercise full territorial criminal jurisdictio...
This Article seeks to fill the gap in the existing literature by exploring the constitutional limits...
For the last 40 years the Supreme Court has been engaged in a measured attack on the sovereignty of ...
The thesis of this article is that by examining Federal Indian Law one better understands that the A...
No other branch of any government at any level in the United States faces the same sorts of unique c...
This Article explains a longstanding problem in federal Indian law. For two centuries, the U.S. Supr...
Conflicts over the jurisdiction between tribal, state, and federal courts arise regularly due to the...
The boundaries of modern tribal criminal jurisdiction are defined by a handful of clear rules—such a...
Oliphant, the first attempt in recent case law to deal directly with the issue of tribal criminal ju...
Throughout most of the history of federal Indian law, the United States Supreme Court has expressed ...
The 2010 passage of the Tribal Law and Order Act will invest significantly more resources in tribal ...
This Note examines the issue of tribal court jurisdiction over cases in which both Indians and non-I...
In 1978 the Supreme Court in Oliphant v. Suquamish Indian Tribe held that the retained sovereignty ...
This Note argues that the current federal laws regarding tribal criminal jurisdiction are contrary t...
This Article explores the consequences of an anomaly in the Supreme Court’s Indian law jurisprudence...
Unlike most sovereigns, American Indian tribes cannot exercise full territorial criminal jurisdictio...
This Article seeks to fill the gap in the existing literature by exploring the constitutional limits...
For the last 40 years the Supreme Court has been engaged in a measured attack on the sovereignty of ...
The thesis of this article is that by examining Federal Indian Law one better understands that the A...
No other branch of any government at any level in the United States faces the same sorts of unique c...
This Article explains a longstanding problem in federal Indian law. For two centuries, the U.S. Supr...