“Tribal Consent” Draft Now Available

My paper, “Tribal Consent,” is available for download on SSRN. It’s a draft, perhaps even messier than my usual drafts. Constructive criticism welcome to my regular email address.

Here is the abstract:

Tribal consent to federal statutes, regulations, and cases that decide matters critical to American Indian people and Indian tribes long has been lacking. The nineteenth and twentieth century Supreme Court cases are replete with efforts by Indians and tribes to avoid the dictates of many of these laws and regulations that directly injured tribal interests, almost always to no avail. Congress legislated, the Executive branch acted, and the Supreme Court either walked away or upheld the law and its enforcement. Conversely, tribal governance has been dramatically altered in recent decades in part by the notion that non-Indians and non-tribal entities have not consented to assertions of tribal government authority over them. This lack of consent is meaningful because Indian tribes are not beholden to the dictates of the American Constitution (nor could they be), and so the nonmembers could be subject to governmental authority unfettered by individual constitutional rights.

The first part of this paper is a short history of the incorporation of Indian tribes into the American policy, largely without the consent of Indian tribes and Indian people. The second part moves beyond the discussion of the lack of tribal consent to federal and state governance, and how that lack of consent actually generated the legal and political justification for Congressional (and federal) plenary power over Indian affairs. The third part describes how express and literal consent has come to dominate federal common law on tribal authority over nonmembers. This part explores the irony of introducing nonmembers in vast numbers into Indian country without tribal consent, and then forcing tribal governments to acquire literal consent from those nonmembers in order to govern them. The fourth, and last, part argues for a theory of tribal consent. Unlike the vague and even fictional consent espoused by thinkers such as Justice Kennedy, and denigrated by critics who bemoan its limitations, tribal consent theory should be explored and integrated in federal Indian law. In fact, the United Nations Declaration of the Rights of Indigenous Peoples requires that states acquired the free and informed consent of Indigenous governments and people before taking action detrimental to those peoples, giving rise to a kind of literal consent theory and practice desperately needed in American Indian affairs.

Chi-miigwetch to the Stanford Journal of Civil Rights and Civil Liberties offering a home to this paper.

One thought on ““Tribal Consent” Draft Now Available

  1. vance gillette September 27, 2011 / 12:10 pm

    matt

    Enjoyed the article on tribal civil jurisdiction and “consent.”

    Critique: it was too wordy.
    The gut issue or leading case Montana v. U.S. and Strate is the black
    letter law, which took about 60 pages to get to….

    Next, would be better to explain WAYS to get consent, e.g. enact a
    TERO (tribal employment rights ordinance law) that says:

    I apply for a TERO permit and agree that the Three Affiilaited
    Tribes has jurisdiction over me and my company, and any
    subcontractors I may hire or contract with. This includes
    oil drilling co., roustabout crew, water hauler, frac crew,
    fence workers, surveyors, inspectors, clean up crews,
    and so on.

    I agree to abide by all tribal and federal laws that regulate
    oil and gas activities on the Ft. Berthold Indian Reservation.

    I agree to utilize the tribal forums such as TERO admin.
    agency and tribal court for any disputes that may arise
    form oil and gas activities on the RES.

    You mentioned the lease case as a good way to exert
    tribal jurisdiction, but need to expound on this more,
    as noted above (TERO consent form or example).

    Everyone is an expert nowadays, and good legal
    drafting is a lost art that often overlooked. I suggest you
    add some more practical tips in the Turtle Talk news.

    later

    vance gillette Indian attorney and tribal judge
    oil patch of North Dakota

Comments are closed.