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John Borrows has published “Anishinaabe Treaties and the Rule of Law” in the Canadian Journal of Law & Jurisprudence.
Here is the abstract:
This lecture considers conserving and upholding Anishinaabe law as it relates to the more-than-human world. It suggests that we must continually renew our broadest legal commitments to protect and preserve what sustains us. Protecting clans and the animals from which they derive is close to the heart of Anishinaabe law (ode’naakonige). This law is embodied through Anishinaabe treaties with our evolutionary progenitors, our clan relatives. These treaties with the more-than-human world were incorporated into treaties with other First Nations. From an Anishinaabe perspective, these obligations were, in turn, eventually imported into treaties with the Crown. Anishinaabe treaties with the more-than-human world continue to inform how Anishinaabe people practice constitutional law through consultation protocols, legislation, and participation in court proceedings.

Alexandra Fay has posted “Coordinated Sovereignty: Federal Tools for Resolving State-Tribe Conflict,” forthcoming in the Wisconsin Law Review, on SSRN.
Here is the abstract:
American federalism describes the constitutional relationships between three kinds of sovereign political bodies: the federal government, the fifty states, and 575 federally recognized Indian tribes. Yet federalism scholarship often elides the third sovereign, instead exclusively focusing on the relations between states and the federal sovereign. Previously, I argued that trilateral federalism should frame federal approaches to issues involving tribal governance. This Article continues that work, with a structural examination of federal statutory interventions to resolve conflicts between America’s domestic sovereigns, the states and tribes.
State-tribe conflict is a perennial feature of federal Indian law. This Article engages with examples across various substantive fields of law—including family law, criminal justice, gaming, taxation, and public health—to articulate four models of federal statutory intervention: (1) Federal Preemption, (2) Opt-In, (3) Guided Compacting, and (4) Noninterference. The Article considers their relative strengths, weaknesses, and appropriate contexts. Finally, the Article applies these models to the case study of traffic enforcement in Oklahoma Indian country, a major site of tribe-state conflict in the wake of the Supreme Court’s 2020 decision in McGirt v. Oklahoma.

Here are the (hilarious, dare I say?) materials in Quiroga v. State:

The resolution of the Affiliated Tribes of Northwest Indians:

Here are the materials in United States v. Washington (W.D. Wash.):

Here is the complaint in Grand Traverse Band of Ottawa and Chippewa Indians v. National Indian Gaming Commission (D.D.C.):

Here are the new materials in McClamary v. D&L Real Estate Enterprises LLC (C.D. Cal.):
Prior post here.

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