Federal law about Indian tribes tends to be considered separately from the body of law about federal-state relations. But the problems of coordination, cooperation, deference, and preclusion—central to the law of federalism—are also pivotal when contemplating the authority of Indian tribes and their courts. At issue are the respective arenas of Congress and the executive branch, as well as the allocation of power among tribes, states, and the federal government, the attributes and prerogatives of sovereigns, and the deference and comity entailed in intercourt relationships. In the context of either state-federal or tribal-federal law, the task is to work out relations among sovereigns that share land and history. Yet equation of states and ...
Judicial deference to federal legislation affecting Indians is a theme that has persisted throughout...
The most recent Indian law case before the Supreme Court, California v. Cabazon Band of Mission Indi...
People do not normally associate cities with Indian reservations. The mental images typically conjur...
The thesis of this article is that by examining Federal Indian Law one better understands that the A...
This exploration reveals that tribes were not as anomalous as the Supreme Court of the United States...
Since 1831, Indian nations have been viewed as Domestic Dependent Nations located within the geograp...
Federal Indian law... is a loosely related collection of past and present acts of Congress, treaties...
The author examines the three areas of law, tribal power, state jurisdiction, and equal protection, ...
The landmark 2020 U.S. Supreme Court decision in McGirt v. Oklahoma has seen no shortage of scholarl...
The Indigenous nations of the United States have long been subject to federal policy. Since the Civi...
Federal Indian law is dynamic, and though few outside the field acknowledge it, cutting edge. In the...
The U.S. Constitution grants the federal government plenary power over American Indian affairs, yet ...
The federal-Indian relationship is like no other in the world. Indian tribes are denominated \u27dom...
The most recent Indian law case before the Supreme Court, California v. Cabazon Band of Mission Indi...
Professor Perdue describes her use of materials on Indian Tribes at the end of her Conflict of Laws ...
Judicial deference to federal legislation affecting Indians is a theme that has persisted throughout...
The most recent Indian law case before the Supreme Court, California v. Cabazon Band of Mission Indi...
People do not normally associate cities with Indian reservations. The mental images typically conjur...
The thesis of this article is that by examining Federal Indian Law one better understands that the A...
This exploration reveals that tribes were not as anomalous as the Supreme Court of the United States...
Since 1831, Indian nations have been viewed as Domestic Dependent Nations located within the geograp...
Federal Indian law... is a loosely related collection of past and present acts of Congress, treaties...
The author examines the three areas of law, tribal power, state jurisdiction, and equal protection, ...
The landmark 2020 U.S. Supreme Court decision in McGirt v. Oklahoma has seen no shortage of scholarl...
The Indigenous nations of the United States have long been subject to federal policy. Since the Civi...
Federal Indian law is dynamic, and though few outside the field acknowledge it, cutting edge. In the...
The U.S. Constitution grants the federal government plenary power over American Indian affairs, yet ...
The federal-Indian relationship is like no other in the world. Indian tribes are denominated \u27dom...
The most recent Indian law case before the Supreme Court, California v. Cabazon Band of Mission Indi...
Professor Perdue describes her use of materials on Indian Tribes at the end of her Conflict of Laws ...
Judicial deference to federal legislation affecting Indians is a theme that has persisted throughout...
The most recent Indian law case before the Supreme Court, California v. Cabazon Band of Mission Indi...
People do not normally associate cities with Indian reservations. The mental images typically conjur...