Sections 106(a) and 101(27) of the U.S. Bankruptcy Code use the general phrase other foreign or domestic government to abrogate sovereign immunity without specifically referencing Indian tribes. The U.S. Supreme Court has not yet decided whether these sections of the Code abrogate tribal sovereign immunity, and lower court decisions have come to varying conclusions. As a general rule, Indian tribes are immune from suit due to their inherent sovereignty. Congress, however, may abrogate the sovereign immunity of tribes by unequivocally stating its intent to do so in a statute. When interpreting abrogation provisions in a statute, courts have only found an unequivocal expression to be present when the statute explicitly references Indian tri...
(Excerpt) Sovereign immunity, generally, prohibits suit against a sovereign without the sovereign’s ...
A defendant in state and federal courts is entitled to a constitutional protection against self-incr...
This Article explores the consequences of an anomaly in the Supreme Court’s Indian law jurisprudence...
The Indian plenary power doctrine—an invention of the late nineteenth-century Supreme Court—grants C...
On February 26, 2019, the United States Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit in Buchwald Capital A...
Indian tribes create corporations and agencies, such as casinos and economic development organizatio...
This Comment concerns section 106(a) of the Bankruptcy Code, which abrogates sovereign immunity of “...
Native American Indian tribal sovereign immunity is a judicially created doctrine that provides immu...
An examination of the tribal courts\u27 civil jurisdiction and sovereign immunity decisions, and a r...
An examination of the tribal courts\u27 civil jurisdiction and sovereign immunity decisions, and a r...
The effect of tribal sovereign immunity on business transactions is difficult to predict, despite th...
The judicially created doctrine of tribal sovereign immunity was recognized as part of the unique re...
This Note will discuss whether Indian tribes can assert tribal sovereign immunity to avoid complianc...
Sovereign immunity jurisprudence has always been a confusing jumble of assumptions which seem incomp...
The Bankruptcy Code (“Code”) exists as a mechanism for good faith debtors to discharge debts and see...
(Excerpt) Sovereign immunity, generally, prohibits suit against a sovereign without the sovereign’s ...
A defendant in state and federal courts is entitled to a constitutional protection against self-incr...
This Article explores the consequences of an anomaly in the Supreme Court’s Indian law jurisprudence...
The Indian plenary power doctrine—an invention of the late nineteenth-century Supreme Court—grants C...
On February 26, 2019, the United States Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit in Buchwald Capital A...
Indian tribes create corporations and agencies, such as casinos and economic development organizatio...
This Comment concerns section 106(a) of the Bankruptcy Code, which abrogates sovereign immunity of “...
Native American Indian tribal sovereign immunity is a judicially created doctrine that provides immu...
An examination of the tribal courts\u27 civil jurisdiction and sovereign immunity decisions, and a r...
An examination of the tribal courts\u27 civil jurisdiction and sovereign immunity decisions, and a r...
The effect of tribal sovereign immunity on business transactions is difficult to predict, despite th...
The judicially created doctrine of tribal sovereign immunity was recognized as part of the unique re...
This Note will discuss whether Indian tribes can assert tribal sovereign immunity to avoid complianc...
Sovereign immunity jurisprudence has always been a confusing jumble of assumptions which seem incomp...
The Bankruptcy Code (“Code”) exists as a mechanism for good faith debtors to discharge debts and see...
(Excerpt) Sovereign immunity, generally, prohibits suit against a sovereign without the sovereign’s ...
A defendant in state and federal courts is entitled to a constitutional protection against self-incr...
This Article explores the consequences of an anomaly in the Supreme Court’s Indian law jurisprudence...