Paul Spruhan on the Canadian Indian Free Passage Right

Paul Spruhan, a law clerk for the Navajo Nation Supreme Court, has posed “The Canadian Indian Free Passage Right: The Last Stronghold of Explicit Race Restriction in United States Immigration Law,” forthcoming in the North Dakota Law Review. Here is the abstract:

The paper discusses the little-known provision of the Immigration and Nationality Act that allows Canadian Indians to cross the United States-Canada border free of visa and other immigration requirements. Noting that the provision restricts the right to persons of 50% or more “blood of the American Indian race,” the paper traces its origin in a 1928 statute that did not include the blood quantum requirement, the interpretation of the term “Indian” as used in the 1928 statute by the Immigration and Naturalization Service, and the reasons for the 1952 amendment that added blood quantum. The paper then discusses the constitutionality of the provision in light of the current approach of the United States Supreme Court to racial provisions in federal Indian law and immigration law.