Mary Swift has published “Banishing Habeas Jurisdiction: Why Federal Courts Lack Jurisdiction to Hear Tribal Banishment Actions” in the Washington Law Review. The article is available on SSRN here.
Here is the abstract:
The Indian Civil Rights Act (ICRA or ‘the Act’) of 1968 grants members of federally recognized Indian tribes individual civil rights similar to those enumerated in the federal Bill of Rights and Fourteenth Amendment. However, the Act provides only one explicit federal remedy for violations of the rights secured therein: the writ of habeas corpus. The U.S. Supreme Court has refused to read an implied cause of action into the Act. Some federal courts assert habeas jurisdiction to review tribal banishment actions alleged to violate ICRA, but not over disenrollment actions. Tribal banishment means an individual tribal member is cast out from tribal lands and often removed from tribal membership rolls. Tribal disenrollment means an individual tribal member is removed from tribal membership rolls and often denied access to some or all tribal facilities. This Comment argues that federal courts should not assert habeas jurisdiction over tribal banishment actions because: exercising habeas jurisdiction over tribal banishment actions contravenes federal Indian law canons of construction; expansive habeas jurisdiction disturbs the careful balance struck by Congress and the Court between individual rights and tribal sovereignty; declining jurisdiction protects tribes’ sovereign authority to determine their own membership; and the line between banishment and disenrollment is arbitrary because tribes have authority to exclude nonmembers from tribal lands. Though it may leave a few individual tribal members without a remedy to challenge tribal banishment alleged to violate ICRA, such a uniform rule best protects tribal sovereignty, preserves congressional intent, and promotes robust tribal court systems.
Abstract: “Though it may leave a few individual tribal members without a remedy to challenge tribal banishment alleged to violate ICRA, such a uniform rule best protects tribal sovereignty, preserves congressional intent, and promotes robust tribal court systems.”
What it promotes is a robust violation of minority rights guaranteed to tribal members under ICRA. Banishment is not the worst thing that can happen to a tribal member victimized by the arbitrary authority of a malicious tribal government. The sanctity of unfettered tribal sovereignty was cited by Dick Wilson as he imposed his authority and inflicted his extra-judicial violence on the people of Pine Ridge in the 1970’s. I’m sure the traditional tribal members would have welcomed Federal Court habeas intervention under ICRA to stop the killings, The tribal council form of government, with a strong executive, was imposed on tribes by the U.S. and does not resemble most first nations’ indigenous models of governance. Tribal sovereignty, without a mechanism to guarantee the protection of minority rights under the rule of law, is just another word for oligarchy.