Hopa Mountain: Preparing for Law School

Here:

  • Sunday, January 19, 2025
  • 12:00 — 13:00

This online workshop will offer valuable insights and guidance as you prepare to apply and matriculate into law school.

Facilitated by Shelbi Fitzpatrick 1L, Stanford Law School, Gabriella Blatt, 1L, Stanford Law School, Erica Mendez 1L, University of Wisconsin Law School, and Manuel Lewis 1L, University of Michigan Law School

Join Zoom Meeting

https://us02web.zoom.us/j/88564637160?pwd=TFJLelpCZDkzdFhsVERzSUZkamwwQT09

Meeting ID: 885 6463 7160

Passcode: 064903

California Federal Court Declines to Enjoin Trust Land Acquisition for Koi Nation

Here are the new materials in Federated Indians of Graton Rancheria v. Haaland (N.D. Cal.):

35 Motion for PI

40 Federal Response

43 Graton Reply

52 DCT Order Denying PI

Complaint here.

Washington Federal Court Suppresses Most Parts of Expert Opinion on Lummi Police Officer Accused of Strangulation

Here is the order in United States v. Jefferson (W.D. Wash.):

UArizona IPLP Indian Law Day Jan. 23

Here.

An upcoming online and in person recruitment event, aimed at providing prospective Native law students with tips for the application process, a student panel, info about IPLP, and our admissions office will be there as well to answer questions and be a resource for folks that want to know more about applying to law school.

Join IPLP faculty, staff, and students for Indigenous Law Day, January 23, in person or online!

Attendees will get more information about the application process, our Indigenous law program, and get tips for success from current students.

Register today: https://lnkd.in/gs-8Kr4m

Harvard NALSA Indian Law Symposium Feb. 28, 2025

More details here (updated Jan. 20, 2025):

The Harvard Law School (HLS) Native Law Students Association (NALSA) is excited to present the 2025 HLS Indian Law Symposiumtitled”De-Othering Indian Law: Indigenous Topics as Canon Legal Doctrine.” 

The symposium will be a day-long event on Friday, February 28, 2025,from 9am – 5pm
The symposium is open to the public and free to attend forregistered attendees. You can register using the form link located on the symposium website.

We have an amazing line-up of speakers coming, including: 
U.S. District Court Judge Sunshine S. Sykes, ASU Law School Dean Stacy Leeds, Navajo Nation Chief Justice JoAnn Jayne, White House Senior Policy Advisor on Native Affairs and Stanford Professor Elizabeth Reese, UNSW & HLS Professor Megan Davis, MSU Professor Wenona T. Singel, and University of Michigan Professor Matthew Fletcher

For those interested in a virtual link to the symposium, please fill out the registration form and indicate interest in a virtual live stream option. 

For any questions, please contact nalsa@mail.law.harvard.edu

Susanville Indian Rancheria Sues IHS over Contract Support Costs

Here is the complaint in Susanville Indian Rancheria v. Beccera (E.D. Cal.):

National NALSA Writing Competition Deadline Feb. 22, 2025

Here:

The National NALSA Writing Competition is sponsored by the National Native American Law Students Association (“National NALSA”). This 2024-25 academic year, Seattle University School of Law is hosting the Competition in collaboration with the Center for Indian Law and Policy, American Indian Law Journal (“AILJ”), and Seattle University’s Native American Law Students Association (“NALSA”) chapter. The goal of the Competition is to encourage law students to become involved with National NALSA and increase awareness and education regarding legal issues that impact Native Nations, Inter-tribal organizations, and Indigenous communities.

Submission deadline is February 22, 2025. Please review the competition brochure, website, and rules linked below.

2025 Writing Competition Website

2025 Brochure

Writing Competition Rules

Call for Papers: Texas Journal of Civil Rights and Civil Liberties Indigenous Rights Symposium

The Texas Journal of Civil Rights and Civil Liberties is seeking articles from legal scholars, practitioners, or individuals with unique expertise on legal issues pertaining to Indigenous Rights for our spring special issue. If you have any articles on Indigenous issues, please submit them to us via scholastica or to this email (tjclcrsubmissions@gmail.com). Feel free to forward this to any colleagues that may also be interested! Article length can vary (typically from 30-60 pages) and so can topics. Any questions or concerns can also be sent to the TJCLCR submissions editor at this email: tjclcrsubmissions@gmail.com.  

Deb Haaland: The Impact of President Biden’s Apology to Indian Country

Here, from the Interior Department website:

01/06/2025

Deb Haaland, Secretary of the Interior

Of all of the work we have accomplished at the Department of the Interior under the Biden-Harris administration, one of the most significant has been the Federal Indian Boarding School Initiative.

In October at the Gila River Indian Community in Arizona, I listened as President Joe Biden issued a historic apology for the U.S. government’s role in creating and perpetuating the federal Indian boarding school system. As I listened, I remembered my grandma Helen recount the story of when she was taken away to St. Catherine’s Indian Boarding School in Santa Fe, New Mexico. She told me about the day a priest from the Pueblo of Laguna came to our village of Mesita, “gathered up the kids,” put them on a train, and sent them away. She was 8 years old at the time. Her parents had no idea when she would return home.

My grandfather Tony, who was from Jemez Pueblo, was also sent to St. Catherine’s. Helen and Tony spent five years at the same school – far away from their families, communities, and Pueblo cultures – and later chose to build a life from the bond they formed as children. Years later, their daughter Mary – my mother – would be sent to St. Catherine’s, too. I am here because of their persistence.

This trauma is not new to Indigenous people, but it is new to many people across our nation.  

Federal Indian boarding schools have impacted every Indigenous person I know, including staff across our Department. While many of us cannot recount all the ways in which the legacy of these schools has affected our lives, my grandmother and my mother carried scars from that era that they passed down to me. This reality persists with many Native peoples, whether we attended a boarding school ourselves, or are descended from those who did. In memory of Helen, Tony, Mary, and all those impacted by our country’s horrific assimilation policies – I have sought to shed light on this legacy and leverage my platform to amplify the voices of those who deserve to be heard. Because Native American history is American history.

One of the reasons I launched the Federal Indian Boarding School Initiative was to ensure that this important story was told. That all of America knows of the intergenerational impacts of these policies, and that we – as a nation – take steps to heal from them.  

Three years ago, our team embarked on a journey to bring to light this terrible era – one that is frequently excluded from history books. Interior staff – many of them Indigenous – worked through their own trauma to review over 103 million pages of federal records that informed the investigative report called for by the Initiative. That report outlined the number of schools, known attendees, and the extent to which teachers and priests denied children of their languages, cultures and lifeways. Based on available records, nearly 1,000 of those children died, though we believe the number to be much higher.

As part of the Initiative, Assistant Secretary for Indian Affairs Bryan Newland and I planned “The Road to Healing” – a year-long, 12-stop journey across Indian Country where we listened to and wept with survivors and descendants of these boarding schools. The stories I heard from survivors about getting beat with ropes and razor straps, and the stories of girls being molested in the dark of night, were difficult to hear in person. While in Alaska, an elder man spoke of a group of young Alaska Native boys who arrived at the boarding school from the Interior and who were dressed “magnificently in their caribou pants and shirts,” and carrying bags of dried fish and berries – nutritious food that would carry them through for a time – only to have their clothes and belongings torn from them and burned in a pyre.

Much of this horror took place at the then-named Carlisle Indian Industrial School in Pennsylvania, which from 1879 to 1918 served as the blueprint for boarding schools that would eventually open across the nation. Many of the children who died there are still buried on the school’s ground. In December, President Biden established the Carlisle Federal Indian Boarding School National Monument. Under the careful hands of the National Park Service – often called America’s storyteller – and in partnership with the U.S. Army who now manage the U.S. Army Carlisle Barracks, the history and horror of this place will never be lost or rewritten.

With the support of these partners and new agreements between the Department, the Library of Congress, and the Smithsonian’s National Museum of American History, our country will continue to learn from the voices and stories of those the federal government attempted – and failed – to silence.

When I began the Federal Indian Boarding School Initiative, I had no idea that it would result in a presidential apology, or even a national monument dedicated to our people. I just knew it was necessary.

The boarding school era worked to systematically break up entire communities, erase cultures and traditions, and eradicate Native languages. On the heels of the boarding school era, the Dawes Act and other harmful federal policies worked to outright steal land and resources from under the feet of our communities. Although we have made much progress, this heavy legacy endures, and more federal action is needed to address the wrongs of the past and allow our country to heal from the assimilation era.

This work is not finished. The pain and hardship of the past will not be corrected in our lifetimes. But the President’s actions and the work of the incredible team at the Department begins a new chapter and breathes new life into our shared building of a better future. Our past can never be re-written, but together, we can heal.

Ninth Circuit Rules in Favor of Navajo Citizen in Relocation Costs Suit

Here is the opinion in Barton v. Office of Navajo and Hopi Indian Relocation.

Briefs:

Barton Brief

Answer Brief

Record