Although Native Americans in the contiguous United States have benefited from recent congressional reforms, Alaska Native communities were largely ignored. Despite the widely acknowledged crisis of sexual assault and domestic violence in rural Alaska Native communities, Congress has explicitly exempted Alaska from legislation that would otherwise give people in these communities the ability to protect themselves. Although public outcry has prompted pending legislation in Congress to repeal some of these exemptions, such as the Alaska Safe Families and Villages Act, even that legislation does not go far enough to achieve a permanent and effective solution to what is a life-or-death problem for many Alaska Natives. This Note argues that Congr...
This paper was originally presented in Symposium III, "Group Rights at the Close of the Twentieth Ce...
This Article suggests that the Supreme Court has not deprived Alaska Native Villages of a valid bas...
This issue brief will describe the high rate of sexual violence in Native American communities, whic...
Although Native Americans in the contiguous United States have benefited from recent congressional r...
Until 2022, all but one of the 229 Alaska tribes were barred from special domestic violence criminal...
Extensive case law already exists in Alaska on the jurisdiction of tribal courts over domestic rel...
Across the country, Indigenous women are murdered more than any other population and go missing at d...
The Missing and Murdered Indigenous Persons (MMIP) crisis today is a continuation of the centuries o...
Native American women face violence at astronomically high rates compared to any other ethnic group ...
As Alaska struggles with criminal justice delivery to Alaska Native villages, many experiments have ...
This article examines some of the unresolved issues that will shape tribal court jurisdiction in Ala...
After the forced separation of Indian families, Congress passed the Indian Child Welfare Act (ICWA) ...
One in three Native American women has been raped or has experienced an attempted rape. Federal offi...
Federal-tribal consultation is one of the only mechanisms available to American Indian and Alaska Na...
For some purposes — most notably when the legal question of tribal sovereignty is pursued — Alaska h...
This paper was originally presented in Symposium III, "Group Rights at the Close of the Twentieth Ce...
This Article suggests that the Supreme Court has not deprived Alaska Native Villages of a valid bas...
This issue brief will describe the high rate of sexual violence in Native American communities, whic...
Although Native Americans in the contiguous United States have benefited from recent congressional r...
Until 2022, all but one of the 229 Alaska tribes were barred from special domestic violence criminal...
Extensive case law already exists in Alaska on the jurisdiction of tribal courts over domestic rel...
Across the country, Indigenous women are murdered more than any other population and go missing at d...
The Missing and Murdered Indigenous Persons (MMIP) crisis today is a continuation of the centuries o...
Native American women face violence at astronomically high rates compared to any other ethnic group ...
As Alaska struggles with criminal justice delivery to Alaska Native villages, many experiments have ...
This article examines some of the unresolved issues that will shape tribal court jurisdiction in Ala...
After the forced separation of Indian families, Congress passed the Indian Child Welfare Act (ICWA) ...
One in three Native American women has been raped or has experienced an attempted rape. Federal offi...
Federal-tribal consultation is one of the only mechanisms available to American Indian and Alaska Na...
For some purposes — most notably when the legal question of tribal sovereignty is pursued — Alaska h...
This paper was originally presented in Symposium III, "Group Rights at the Close of the Twentieth Ce...
This Article suggests that the Supreme Court has not deprived Alaska Native Villages of a valid bas...
This issue brief will describe the high rate of sexual violence in Native American communities, whic...