Here are the materials in Santee Sioux Nation v. Tso (D. Neb.):
3 Brief ISO Motion for Preiminary Injunction

Here are the materials in Santee Sioux Nation v. Tso (D. Neb.):
3 Brief ISO Motion for Preiminary Injunction

Breanna K. Bollig has published “Improving Public Schools: What Advocates Can Learn From Indian Education Rights” in the Journal of Law and Education.
An except:
Unbeknownst to most education advocates, though, is that Indian education rights provide critical lessons on how to improve schools and the right to education. Just as tribal nations—as separate sovereigns that are capable of enacting their own laws—are considered “laboratories of legal innovation,” there is massive potential for studying Indian education rights. With its successes and failures, education advocates can look to Indian education rights to better develop a strategy to improve public schools. In fact, education advocates could have much needed guidance in asking vital questions surrounding inadequate and inequitable public schools. For example, how should the states and the federal government share the responsibility of education in the United States? How should a federal right to education be created? How can we better hold inadequate and inequitable schools accountable? What other strategies can we use to improve inadequate and inequitable schools?

Here is the order in National Education Association of New Mexico v. Central Consolidated School District (N.M. Ct. App.):

Here are the materials in Peterson v. Harrah’s NC Casino Company LLC (W.D. N.C.):

Here are the materials in the case captioned California Valley Miwok Tribe v. Haaland (D.D.C.):
37 Motion for Preliminary Injunction

Kekek Jason Stark has [published “Indian Policing: Agents of Assimilation” in the Case Western Law Review. PDF
An excerpt:
In the wake of the protests calling for police reform, driven by the events surrounding the deaths of George Floyd, Breonna Taylor, Michael Brown, and so many others, including Cecil Lacy (Tulalip Tribes) and Rene Davis (Muckleshoot Indian Tribe), as well as the sexual assault at the hands of the police involving L.B. (Northern Cheyenne Tribe), I began to question the role and history that the police have played in Indian Country as agents of assimilation. While conducting research for this Article, it became apparent that following the enactment of the Indian Civil Rights Act, a lot of work and research was conducted on the status of tribal justice systems. Considering the recent events detailed above, this Article seeks to further that earlier analysis and ask the question: Where are we at with our efforts to re-indigenize Indian Country policing fifty years later? This Article attempts to begin to answer that question.

Here are the materials so far in Cantrell v. Washoe County Sheriff (D. Nev.):

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