Although the Court has in many instances ruled in favor of Native Americans, its approach in the multiple cases it has decided involving them could rarely be called therapeutic in the sense that term is used in the Introduction to this issue. The Court\u27s jurisprudence in this area provides perhaps the starkest American example of the appellate judiciary functioning in an antitherapeutic role in the context of majority-minority conflicts. In this brief Article, I will identify particular aspects of the Court\u27s jurisprudence to make this point. Further, I will suggest what is needed in order for the Court to function in a more conciliatory role
This paper is part of a call for a paradigm-shifting re-examination by Indian tribes and Indian peop...
INTRODUCTION The judicial function is no stranger to Native Americans. Prior to their contact with E...
Since his appointment to the United States Supreme Court, Chief Justice William H. Rehnquist has gui...
The debate over which legal Indigenous Peoples should govern Native American political power and pro...
Like the miner\u27s canary, the Indian marks the shift from fresh air to poison gas in our political...
The Supreme Court and individual justices\u27 treatment of American Indian interests has generated r...
There has long been concern that the U.S. Supreme Court is hostile to Indian tribes. Between 1990 an...
This article is a content analysis examination of 107 federal court cases involving American Indian ...
Jurisprudence of the Supreme Court of the United States and policy of the Congress make certain assu...
For a century and a half, the Supreme Court was faithful to a set of foundation principles respectin...
American Indian tribal sovereignty is viewed very differently in the United States Supreme Court tha...
Since 1831, Indian nations have been viewed as Domestic Dependent Nations located within the geograp...
This article is intended to rebut several of Mr. Brakel\u27s key assertions and to emphasize the wel...
This article addresses an ongoing problem in the area of Indian law. For years, the Native American ...
For the last thirty years the Supreme Court has been adjusting the boundaries of American Indian tri...
This paper is part of a call for a paradigm-shifting re-examination by Indian tribes and Indian peop...
INTRODUCTION The judicial function is no stranger to Native Americans. Prior to their contact with E...
Since his appointment to the United States Supreme Court, Chief Justice William H. Rehnquist has gui...
The debate over which legal Indigenous Peoples should govern Native American political power and pro...
Like the miner\u27s canary, the Indian marks the shift from fresh air to poison gas in our political...
The Supreme Court and individual justices\u27 treatment of American Indian interests has generated r...
There has long been concern that the U.S. Supreme Court is hostile to Indian tribes. Between 1990 an...
This article is a content analysis examination of 107 federal court cases involving American Indian ...
Jurisprudence of the Supreme Court of the United States and policy of the Congress make certain assu...
For a century and a half, the Supreme Court was faithful to a set of foundation principles respectin...
American Indian tribal sovereignty is viewed very differently in the United States Supreme Court tha...
Since 1831, Indian nations have been viewed as Domestic Dependent Nations located within the geograp...
This article is intended to rebut several of Mr. Brakel\u27s key assertions and to emphasize the wel...
This article addresses an ongoing problem in the area of Indian law. For years, the Native American ...
For the last thirty years the Supreme Court has been adjusting the boundaries of American Indian tri...
This paper is part of a call for a paradigm-shifting re-examination by Indian tribes and Indian peop...
INTRODUCTION The judicial function is no stranger to Native Americans. Prior to their contact with E...
Since his appointment to the United States Supreme Court, Chief Justice William H. Rehnquist has gui...