The capacity of Indian tribal sovereignty to protect tribes from outside encroachment and interference has steadily diminished from when the concept was first enunciated in the nineteenth century in the Marshall Indian Law Trilogy. This article assumes as a working premise that only bringing tribes into the Constitution as co-equal sovereigns will end the attrition. The article examines how this might happen, either through creative interpretation of existing constitutional text or by amending the Constitution. Each of these proposals is examined to see if it empowers tribes to manage their futures more effectively, is capacious enough to include the vast majority of tribes, maintains the union’s security and stability, and has political sa...
The author examines the three areas of law, tribal power, state jurisdiction, and equal protection, ...
This article critiques the contemporary doctrine of Indian tribal self-determination thirty years af...
Since 1831, Indian nations have been viewed as Domestic Dependent Nations located within the geograp...
The capacity of Indian tribal sovereignty to protect tribes from outside encroachment and interferen...
As a cure for what ails democracy in a pluralistic modem society, such as ours, Michael Sandel recom...
This Article explores a radical method under the U.S. Constitution for devolving extraordinary polit...
This law review Article examines: (1) the underpinnings of tribal sovereignty within the American sy...
Full-text available at SSRN. See link in this record.This article considers a potential congressiona...
This Article explains a longstanding problem in federal Indian law. For two centuries, the U.S. Supr...
For the last 40 years the Supreme Court has been engaged in a measured attack on the sovereignty of ...
American Indian tribes would appear to be natural constituents and beneficiaries of the multicultura...
This article discusses James A. Porres III\u27s essay, The Constitution of the United States Applies...
This Article argues that current Supreme Court reasoning concerning the reserved powers of state gov...
This Article focuses on the actions of the federal agencies that do not appear on the radar screen -...
The author examines the three areas of law, tribal power, state jurisdiction, and equal protection, ...
This article critiques the contemporary doctrine of Indian tribal self-determination thirty years af...
Since 1831, Indian nations have been viewed as Domestic Dependent Nations located within the geograp...
The capacity of Indian tribal sovereignty to protect tribes from outside encroachment and interferen...
As a cure for what ails democracy in a pluralistic modem society, such as ours, Michael Sandel recom...
This Article explores a radical method under the U.S. Constitution for devolving extraordinary polit...
This law review Article examines: (1) the underpinnings of tribal sovereignty within the American sy...
Full-text available at SSRN. See link in this record.This article considers a potential congressiona...
This Article explains a longstanding problem in federal Indian law. For two centuries, the U.S. Supr...
For the last 40 years the Supreme Court has been engaged in a measured attack on the sovereignty of ...
American Indian tribes would appear to be natural constituents and beneficiaries of the multicultura...
This article discusses James A. Porres III\u27s essay, The Constitution of the United States Applies...
This Article argues that current Supreme Court reasoning concerning the reserved powers of state gov...
This Article focuses on the actions of the federal agencies that do not appear on the radar screen -...
The author examines the three areas of law, tribal power, state jurisdiction, and equal protection, ...
This article critiques the contemporary doctrine of Indian tribal self-determination thirty years af...
Since 1831, Indian nations have been viewed as Domestic Dependent Nations located within the geograp...