This Article explores the consequences of an anomaly in the Supreme Court’s Indian law jurisprudence. In the past few decades, the Court has sharply limited the regulatory powers of tribal governments and the jurisdiction of tribal courts while leaving intact the sovereign immunity that tribes have traditionally enjoyed. The result has been that tribes can avoid the effects of otherwise-applicable state and federal law, while at the same time they lack any affirmative powers to regulate events within their territory. This Article argues that this state of affairs is untenable. This Article first suggests that for tribes to exist as effective governments, their sovereign authority must have a territorial component. The Article then discusses...
This Note argues that the current federal laws regarding tribal criminal jurisdiction are contrary t...
American Indian tribal sovereignty is viewed very differently in the United States Supreme Court tha...
Indian tribes create corporations and agencies, such as casinos and economic development organizatio...
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...
Native American Indian tribal sovereign immunity is a judicially created doctrine that provides immu...
American Indian reservations are the poorest parts of the United States, and a higher percentage of ...
While Native nations in the United States have tribal sovereignty—that is, the inherent freedom and ...
For the last thirty years the Supreme Court has been adjusting the boundaries of American Indian tri...
The effect of tribal sovereign immunity on business transactions is difficult to predict, despite th...
The author examines the three areas of law, tribal power, state jurisdiction, and equal protection, ...
This Article explains a longstanding problem in federal Indian law. For two centuries, the U.S. Supr...
The capacity of Indian tribal sovereignty to protect tribes from outside encroachment and interferen...
The thesis of this article is that by examining Federal Indian Law one better understands that the A...
Since 1831, Indian nations have been viewed as Domestic Dependent Nations located within the geograp...
This Note argues that the current federal laws regarding tribal criminal jurisdiction are contrary t...
American Indian tribal sovereignty is viewed very differently in the United States Supreme Court tha...
Indian tribes create corporations and agencies, such as casinos and economic development organizatio...
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...
Native American Indian tribal sovereign immunity is a judicially created doctrine that provides immu...
American Indian reservations are the poorest parts of the United States, and a higher percentage of ...
While Native nations in the United States have tribal sovereignty—that is, the inherent freedom and ...
For the last thirty years the Supreme Court has been adjusting the boundaries of American Indian tri...
The effect of tribal sovereign immunity on business transactions is difficult to predict, despite th...
The author examines the three areas of law, tribal power, state jurisdiction, and equal protection, ...
This Article explains a longstanding problem in federal Indian law. For two centuries, the U.S. Supr...
The capacity of Indian tribal sovereignty to protect tribes from outside encroachment and interferen...
The thesis of this article is that by examining Federal Indian Law one better understands that the A...
Since 1831, Indian nations have been viewed as Domestic Dependent Nations located within the geograp...
This Note argues that the current federal laws regarding tribal criminal jurisdiction are contrary t...
American Indian tribal sovereignty is viewed very differently in the United States Supreme Court tha...
Indian tribes create corporations and agencies, such as casinos and economic development organizatio...