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.
Author: Ann Tweedy
Native American Voting Assistance Act Passes Washington State Legislature
Here.
Anderson and Krakoff Bears Ears Op Ed
Here.
Letter to the Editor from an “Orca”
Actually by Tribal Attorney and Yakama member Jack Fiander but drawing parallels to the orcas’ experience. Here.
Brief Commentary on Carpenter v. Murphy
I was interviewed by Tulsa Public Radio Station KWGS last week. A short summary is here.
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
Seattle Meeting on Bill Relating to Missing & Murdered Indigenous Women 12/21
Info. is here.
Seattle Is U.S. City with the Most Murdered and Missing Indigenous Women
Here.
Stay Lifted in Kids’ Climate Trial
Here.
New piece on the cultural and social effects of tribal extractive development
Carla Fredericks, Kate Finn, Erica Gajda, and Jesse Heibel have published “Responsible Resource Development: A Strategic Plan to Consider Social and Cultural Impacts of Tribal Extractive Industry Development” in Harvard Journal of Law & Gender Online. Here.
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