Alex Skibine on Legislating Tribal Civil Jurisdiction Over Non-Members

Alexander Tallchief Skibine has posted a very interesting paper, “Incorporation Without Assimilation: Legislating Tribal Civil Jurisdiction Over Non-Members,” on SSRN. It is forthcoming in the UCLA Law Review Discourse.

The abstract:

For the last 40 years the Supreme Court has been engaged in a measured attack on the sovereignty of Indian tribes when it comes to tribal court jurisdiction over people who are not members of the tribe asserting that jurisdiction. The Congress has already enacted legislation partially restoring some tribal courts’ criminal jurisdiction over non-members. This Essay proposes to legislatively reconfirm the civil jurisdiction of tribal courts over such non-members. After examining the Supreme Court’s jurisprudence in this area and summarizing the Court’s main concerns with such tribal jurisdiction, this Essay explores various legislative options before settling on a preferred course of action. The proposal set forth in the last part of this Essay would reconfirm tribal court civil jurisdiction over non-members provided the tribal courts has established personal jurisdiction over the parties. However, tribal courts’ determinations on this subject would be appealable to federal courts. Furthermore, the Essay proposes to allow non-members being sued in tribal courts the option of removing their cases to federal courts under certain conditions.

Alabama-Coushatta Tribe Cert Petition in Gaming Matter

Here is the petition in Alabama-Coushatta Tribe of Texas v. Texas:

alabama-coushatta-tribe-of-texas-cert-petition.pdf

Questions presented:

Whether IGRA authorizes gaming on tribal lands previously governed by trust statutes that prohibited gaming, as the National Indian Gaming Commission, the Department of the Interior, and the First Circuit have concluded, or not, as the Fifth Circuit has held.

Lower court materials here.

UPDATE:

ncai-amicus-brief.pdf

ysleta-amicus-curiae-brief.pdf

texas-bio.pdf

HCN: “The Klamath River now has the legal rights of a person”

Here.

Briefs in Cayuga Nation Internal Conflicts

Here are the materials in Cayuga Nation v. Campbell (N.Y. A.D.):

Appellants Brief

Reply Brief

Respondent Brief

Amicus Brief

Briefs in Short Term Loan/Sovereign Immunity Matter involving Lac Du Flambeau Ojibwe President

Here are the materials so far in Jones v. Wildcat (E.D. Pa.):

2019.06.07-docket-1-complaint-with-exhibits.pdf

2019.08.30-docket-9-wildcat-mtd.pdf

2019.09.23-22-jones-response-mtd.pdf

2019.09.23-22-1-jones-aff.pdf

Danielle Delaney on Environmental Law, Indigenous Identity, and #NoDAPL

Danielle Delaney has published “Under Coyote’s Mask: Environmental Law, Indigenous Identity, and #NoDAPL” in the Michigan Journal of Race & Law.

The abstract:

This Article studies the relationship between the three main lawsuits filed by the Standing Rock Sioux Tribe, the Cheyenne River Sioux Tribe, and the Yankton Sioux Tribe against the Dakota Access Pipeline (DaPL) and the mass protests launched from the Sacred Stone and Oceti Sakowin protest camps. The use of environmental law as the primary legal mechanism to challenge the construction of the pipeline distorted the indigenous demand for justice as U.S. federal law is incapable of seeing the full depth of the indigenous worldview supporting their challenge. Indigenous activists constantly re-centered the direct actions and protests within indigenous culture to remind non-indigenous activists and the wider media audience that the protests were an indigenous protest, rather than a purely environmental protest, a distinction that was obscured as the litigation progressed. The NoDAPL protests, the litigation to prevent the completion and later operation of the pipeline, and the social movement that the protests engendered, were an explosive expression of indigenous resistance—resistance to systems that silence and ignore indigenous voices while attempting to extract resources from their lands and communities. As a case study, the protests demonstrate how the use of litigation, while often critical to achieving the goals of political protest, distorts the expression of politics not already recognized within the legal discourse.

Federal Court Grants Default Judgment in Federal Action to Enforce Section 184 Mortgage but Requires Gov’t to Answer Tribe’s Affirmative Defenses

Here are the materials in United States v. Estate of Gallegos (D.S.D.):

1-complaint-4.pdf

6-oglala-sioux-tribe-answer.pdf

15-motion-for-default.pdf

16-brief-in-support.pdf

17-dct-order.pdf

22 US Motion to Correct Judgment

26 Amended DCT Order

Ninth Circuit Decides Protect Our Communities v. LaCounte [Wind Energy and Eagle Protection]

Here is the opinion.

Briefs here.

Vox: “6 Native leaders on what it would look like if the US kept its promises”

By Rory Taylor, here.

New Indian Law Scholarship on SSRN

Here:

Law and Science Series No. 1: The Contemporary Methodology for Claiming Reserved Instream Flow Water Rights to Support Aquatic Habitat

Environmental Law, Forthcoming
Number of pages: 29 Posted: 19 Jul 2019
Working Paper Series

The Historical Evolution of the Methodology for Quantifying Federal Reserved Instream Water Rights for American Indian Tribes

Environmental Law, Forthcoming
Number of pages: 45 Posted: 19 Jul 2019
Working Paper Series

Traditional Ecological Rulemaking

Stanford Environmental Law Journal, Vol. 35, No. 2, 2016
Number of pages: 55 Posted: 01 Aug 2019
Accepted Paper Series

Lobbying as a Strategy for Tribal Resilience

2018 BYU Law Review 1159
Number of pages: 73 Posted: 14 Aug 2019
Working Paper Series

Judge Murphy’s Indian Law Legacy

103 Minnesota Law Review 37 (2018)
Number of pages: 28 Posted: 17 Aug 2019
Accepted Paper Series

Learning from Tribal Innovations: Lessons in Climate Change Adaptation

University of Utah College of Law Research Paper No. 328
Number of pages: 35 Posted: 10 Sep 2019 Last Revised: 13 Sep 2019
Working Paper Series

Tribal Data Governance and Informational Privacy: Constructing ‘Indigenous Data Sovereignty’

80 Montana Law Review 229 (2019), Arizona Legal Studies Discussion Paper No. 19-19
Number of pages: 41 Posted: 17 Sep 2019
Accepted Paper Series

Self-Determination, the Trust Doctrine, and Congressional Appropriations: Promise and Pitfalls of Federal Disentanglement from Indian Health Care

Fédéralisme et gouvernance autochtone/Federalism and Aboriginal Governance (Ghislain Otis & Martin Papillon eds., 2013),
Number of pages: 22 Posted: 15 Jul 2019
Accepted Paper Series