Musician Katherine Paul, who grew up on the Swinomish reservation, identifies as queer and indigenous. An interview of her was aired on NPR yesterday.
Announcements
Register Now for the 2019 ILPC/TICA Annual Conference!
It’s coming up quickly!
Hosted by the Tribal In-House Counsel Association and the Indigenous Law and Policy Center at Michigan State University College of Law
October 10-11, 2019, with pre-conference activities on October 9, 2019
648 N. Shaw Lane, East Lansing MI 48824
Check out the tentative agenda and register today.
12.5 Minnesota CLE credits are pending, which includes 1 elimination of bias credit and 1.5 ethics credits.
Be a TICA/ILPC Sponsor! You can find the sponsorship form here.
Last year, our generous sponsors helped us successfully meet our fundraising goal for the 2018 Indigenous Law Conference! We hope to do the same this year, but we need your help once again. Visit TICA’s 2019 fundraising goal page, which will be regularly updated, for more information.


Job Announcements Announcement
Good afternoon!
We are very pleased that so many people have found our Friday legal job announcements to be useful. We are always happy to hear from people who have found jobs from the postings.
Just as a gentle reminder, all requests to post jobs must follow the format identified here:
https://turtletalk.blog/indian-law-job-announcements/
and sent here: indigenous@law.msu.edu
If it doesn’t, we cannot guarantee your announcement will make into a Friday post. We have very limited staff at the ILPC and Turtle Talk, and as we ramp up for our students to return and plan our awesome conference, we appreciate your kindness and patience. We receive between 25-35 announcements weekly, and there will be (the rare) week when we may not be able to get the Friday post done due to other obligations. There is also the possibility we will simply miss something. In addition, we don’t go back and pull down old job posts when they expire–we simply don’t have the capacity for that.
We appreciate your help in making the Turtle Talk Friday job posting service possible for all the lawyers out there looking for Indian Country jobs!
Thanks,
Kate Fort
Joy Harjo Named U.S. Poet Laureate
Now Harjo has a chance to offer that medicine to the whole nation. Today she was appointed 23rd Poet Laureate of the United States. As a member of the Muscogee Nation, she will be the first Native American to serve in that honorary position when she begins this fall.
Congratulations to Eric Hemenway, Winner of Michigan Humanities Award
Humanities Champion of the Year: This award is given to the person whose contributions result in outstanding public humanities impact in their community and in our state. An example would be humanities person (teacher, librarian, cultural leader) who has creatively and successfully brought humanities to the public forum. Faculty and scholars who have taken humanities to the public beyond their classroom, or brought the public into their classroom. 2019 Award Winner: Tie: Charles Ferrell, of the Charles H. Wright Museum of African American History and Eric Hemenway, of the Little Traverse Bay Bands of Odawa Indians.
Washington State Bar Association Indian Law Section CLE Friday
The live auditorium is full, but register for the overflow room here: https://www.mywsba.org/PersonifyEbusiness/Default.aspx?TabID=1356&productId=16363219

Washington State Bar Association Indian Law Section CLE May 10
WSBA Indian Law Section’s CLE will be May 10 in Seattle. A pdf of the agenda is here: ILS CLE Agenda – 2019 To register, click here.

Ethel Branch, Former Navajo Nation Attorney General, to Return to Kanji & Katzen and Lead Flagstaff Office.
Kanji & Katzen is pleased to announce that Ethel Branch will be returning to the Firm as a Member, effective May 1, 2019. Ethel, who made invaluable contributions to the Firm and its clients as an Associate from 2012 to 2015, will open and lead an office for the Firm in Flagstaff, Arizona.
For the past four years, Ethel served with great distinction as the 11th Attorney General of the Navajo Nation. In that capacity, she oversaw the work of an 88-member staff and of numerous outside law firms as she fought for the Nation’s legal interests on a wide variety of fronts. For example, Ethel led the Nation’s litigation and public relations response to the Gold King Mine spill, which contaminated the San Juan River with over 3 million gallons of acid mine waste. Ethel also played a key role in the Nation’s first limited public offering, where she developed documents for the transaction, presented to Standard & Poor’s on the Nation’s financing laws and legal framework, and presented to investors on the stability of the Nation’s legal system. In December 2017, Ethel joined other tribal co-counsel in filing a federal complaint challenging President Trump’s unlawful revocation of the 1.35-million-acre designation of the Bears Ears National Monument by President Obama. As part of that work, Ethel worked closely with the litigation teams for all plaintiff groups and the Bears Ears Inter-Tribal Coalition to advocate for the protection of the Monument in court, before Congress, and in the media.
Among other important work as Attorney General, Ethel led a substantial Criminal Code and Criminal Rules of Procedure revision effort, which included successful passage of stronger white-collar criminal laws; spearheaded a Nation-wide effort to coordinate public safety, prosecutorial, defense, judicial, substance abuse, family, and emergency response services; and established a Public Integrity Task Force that pursued law reform to combat public corruption. She also negotiated a settlement for the Nation with Urban Outfitters regarding trademark infringement and Indian Arts and Crafts Act violations, participated in settlement negotiations with the Hopi Tribe regarding the Little Colorado River basin, and oversaw work that led to the Utah Water Rights Settlement Act. Ethel supervised a successful voting rights claim in Utah resulting in court-ordered redistricting, oversaw numerous special prosecutions and ethics inquiries, and brought vacancies at the Nation’s Department of Justice and the Prosecutor’s Office to historic lows. She instituted a lawsuit against Wells Fargo regarding Consumer Finance Protection Act violations targeted at vulnerable populations within the Navajo Nation, and brought suit against opioid manufacturers, distributors, and pharmacies for the adverse impacts to Navajo tribal members (now part of the Multi-District Litigation). Ethel also worked closely with the state attorneys general for Arizona, New Mexico, and Utah and coordinated prosecutorial matters with the U.S. Attorneys for the three states.
Ethel holds three degrees from Harvard University: an A.B., cum laude, in History; a Master’s degree in Public Policy; and a Juris Doctor.
Kanji & Katzen, presently with offices in Seattle and Ann Arbor, is a law firm devoted exclusively to the advancement of Tribal sovereignty and environmental protection, and has litigated leading cases for Tribes at all levels of the federal court system, as well as in Tribal and state courts, on issues including treaty rights, land claims and reservation boundaries, economic development, jurisdiction, taxation, and the safeguarding of environmental and natural resources. The Firm is delighted to welcome Ethel back and is excited about the tremendous acumen, experience, and energy she will be bring to the advancement of our clients’ interests.
Questions may be directed to David Giampetroni, Managing Partner, at dgiampetroni@kanjikatzen.com or (734) 769 5400.
Senior Attorney Position in Social & Human Services at Muckleshoot
Located in the Greater Seattle Metropolitan Area. Competitive salary and excellent benefits package. Here. Please contact General Counsel Rob Otsea at Rob at muckleshoot.nsn.us if you have questions.
Seattle U.’s American Indian Law Journal seeking submissions
The AILJ is presently seeking content for publication. Submissions from practitioners, professors and students are encouraged. If you are interested in submitting a paper for publication or if you would like more information please contact Hyum-mi Kim, Editor-in-Chief, AILJ@seattleu.edu. Please encourage students and faculty to submit their works!
Deadline for content submission. Spring: January 15, 2019.
The American Indian Law Journal (AILJ) is an academic collaboration among students, faculty, and practitioners. AILJ is designed to fill a critical gap in the amount of current scholarship available to those interested in the rapidly developing field of Indian law. To view prior issues of the AILJ, please visit: law.seattleu.edu/academics/enrichment/journals/ailj
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