American Indian tribal sovereignty is viewed very differently in the United States Supreme Court than it is in American Indian tribal nations. The United States Supreme Court, the progenitor of the legal doctrine of tribal sovereignty, appears skeptical of the doctrine\u27s continuing viability. The Court is therefore veering away from any strong notion of retained inherent tribal sovereignty. American Indian tribes, the sources and perpetuators of de facto tribal sovereignty, are more committed than ever to enacting their sovereignty on the ground, as well as promoting and protecting its legal status in the courts and in Congress. There is an ironic feedback loop created by these different conceptions of tribal sovereignty, in that the mor...
The doctrine of inherent tribal sovereignty—that tribes retain aboriginal sovereign governing power ...
DESCRIPTION: Within the context of the American constitutional system, Native American sovereignty c...
An examination of the tribal courts\u27 civil jurisdiction and sovereign immunity decisions, and a r...
American Indian tribal sovereignty is viewed very differently in the United States Supreme Court tha...
For the last thirty years the Supreme Court has been adjusting the boundaries of American Indian tri...
This Article explains a longstanding problem in federal Indian law. For two centuries, the U.S. Supr...
This article is a content analysis examination of 107 federal court cases involving American Indian ...
While Native nations in the United States have tribal sovereignty—that is, the inherent freedom and ...
This Article argues that tribal advocates should focus on the practical exercises of tribal sovereig...
For a century and a half, the Supreme Court was faithful to a set of foundation principles respectin...
This paper examines the Supreme Court\u27s substantial abandonment of a territorially based concepti...
Public Law 280 was a piece of legislation that dramatically altered the landscape of federal Indian ...
An examination of the tribal courts\u27 civil jurisdiction and sovereign immunity decisions, and a r...
This commentary previews an upcoming Supreme Court case, Bay Mills Indian Community v. Michigan, in ...
Native American Indian tribal sovereign immunity is a judicially created doctrine that provides immu...
The doctrine of inherent tribal sovereignty—that tribes retain aboriginal sovereign governing power ...
DESCRIPTION: Within the context of the American constitutional system, Native American sovereignty c...
An examination of the tribal courts\u27 civil jurisdiction and sovereign immunity decisions, and a r...
American Indian tribal sovereignty is viewed very differently in the United States Supreme Court tha...
For the last thirty years the Supreme Court has been adjusting the boundaries of American Indian tri...
This Article explains a longstanding problem in federal Indian law. For two centuries, the U.S. Supr...
This article is a content analysis examination of 107 federal court cases involving American Indian ...
While Native nations in the United States have tribal sovereignty—that is, the inherent freedom and ...
This Article argues that tribal advocates should focus on the practical exercises of tribal sovereig...
For a century and a half, the Supreme Court was faithful to a set of foundation principles respectin...
This paper examines the Supreme Court\u27s substantial abandonment of a territorially based concepti...
Public Law 280 was a piece of legislation that dramatically altered the landscape of federal Indian ...
An examination of the tribal courts\u27 civil jurisdiction and sovereign immunity decisions, and a r...
This commentary previews an upcoming Supreme Court case, Bay Mills Indian Community v. Michigan, in ...
Native American Indian tribal sovereign immunity is a judicially created doctrine that provides immu...
The doctrine of inherent tribal sovereignty—that tribes retain aboriginal sovereign governing power ...
DESCRIPTION: Within the context of the American constitutional system, Native American sovereignty c...
An examination of the tribal courts\u27 civil jurisdiction and sovereign immunity decisions, and a r...