In a series of cases beginning with its 1981 decision in Montana v. United States, the US. Supreme Court has diminished the civil authority of Indian tribal governments over nonmembers within the tribes\u27 territories. Initially, the Court confined itself to hobbling tribes\u27 inherent sovereign authority over non-tribal members only on non-Indian (\u27fee ) lands within reservations. In 2001, however, the Court ruled for the first time that a tribe did not possess inherent jurisdiction over a lawsuit against state officers that arose on Indian ( trust\u27) lands. What that decision, Nevada v. Hicks, means for general tribal authority over nonmembers on Indian lands is not clear, however, and lower federal courts are struggling to interpr...
This exploration reveals that tribes were not as anomalous as the Supreme Court of the United States...
This book covers the often complex and unfamiliar doctrine of federal Indian law, exposing the raw c...
This Note analyzes the primary conflicts among the order of the District Court for the District of N...
In 1981, the Supreme Court issued its decision in Montana v. United States, severely restricting the...
In the summer of 2020, two significant events brought into focus the relationship between Indigenous...
The modern Congress and executive branch generally recognize that American Indian tribes retain thei...
Crow Tribe v. Montana: New Limits on State Intrusion Into Reservation Rights, New Lessons for State ...
Tribes are in a unique position with respect to their ability to regulate within their territories. ...
This Article explains a longstanding problem in federal Indian law. For two centuries, the U.S. Supr...
In 1978 the Supreme Court in Oliphant v. Suquamish Indian Tribe held that the retained sovereignty ...
This Note examines the issue of tribal court jurisdiction over cases in which both Indians and non-I...
A summary judgment decision is ordinarily not casenote material. But the denial of summary judgment ...
In 1974 the Crow Tribal Council enacted a resolution restricting reservation hunting and fishing to ...
Indian tribes and their members are leading a revived political, legal, and social movement to prote...
The U.S. Constitution grants the federal government plenary power over American Indian affairs, yet ...
This exploration reveals that tribes were not as anomalous as the Supreme Court of the United States...
This book covers the often complex and unfamiliar doctrine of federal Indian law, exposing the raw c...
This Note analyzes the primary conflicts among the order of the District Court for the District of N...
In 1981, the Supreme Court issued its decision in Montana v. United States, severely restricting the...
In the summer of 2020, two significant events brought into focus the relationship between Indigenous...
The modern Congress and executive branch generally recognize that American Indian tribes retain thei...
Crow Tribe v. Montana: New Limits on State Intrusion Into Reservation Rights, New Lessons for State ...
Tribes are in a unique position with respect to their ability to regulate within their territories. ...
This Article explains a longstanding problem in federal Indian law. For two centuries, the U.S. Supr...
In 1978 the Supreme Court in Oliphant v. Suquamish Indian Tribe held that the retained sovereignty ...
This Note examines the issue of tribal court jurisdiction over cases in which both Indians and non-I...
A summary judgment decision is ordinarily not casenote material. But the denial of summary judgment ...
In 1974 the Crow Tribal Council enacted a resolution restricting reservation hunting and fishing to ...
Indian tribes and their members are leading a revived political, legal, and social movement to prote...
The U.S. Constitution grants the federal government plenary power over American Indian affairs, yet ...
This exploration reveals that tribes were not as anomalous as the Supreme Court of the United States...
This book covers the often complex and unfamiliar doctrine of federal Indian law, exposing the raw c...
This Note analyzes the primary conflicts among the order of the District Court for the District of N...