Tenth Circuit Briefs in Eminent Domain Dispute involving Kiowa Tribe

Here are the briefs in Enable Oklahoma Intrastate Transmission LLC v. A 25 Foot Wide Easement:

enable brief

landowners brief

United States brief

reply

Lower court materials here and here.

 

Kristen Carpenter & Angela Riley: “Privatizing the Reservation?”

Kristen A. Carpenter and Angela R. Riley have posted their fascinating article, “Privatizing the Reservation?“, on SSRN. The article is forthcoming in the Stanford Law Review. Here is the abstract:

The problems of American Indian poverty and reservation living conditions have inspired various explanations. One account advanced by certain economists and commentators is now animating the Trump administration’s apparent desire to ‘privatize’ Indian lands, namely that reservation poverty is rooted in the federal Indian trust arrangement, which preserves the tribal land base by limiting the marketability of lands within reservations. Policy makers are advocating for measures that would promote the individuation and alienability of tribal lands, while diminishing federal and tribal oversight, toward wealth maximization. Taking a different view, this Article complicates and challenges the narrative of Indian poverty and land tenure advanced by advocates for privatization. We focus on real estate and housing in Indian Country to make three points. First, we argue the salience of American Indian homelands as places of collective religious significance, socio-economic sustenance, and territorial governance has been lost in the privatization debate, which also largely disregards issues of remedial justice associated with conquest and colonization. Second, we introduce to the legal literature new empirical data and economic analysis demonstrating that the current system of land tenure in Indian Country is much more varied, and recent innovations in federal-tribal housing and finance programs are more promising, than some of the calls for privatization would suggest. Finally, using specific examples from Indian Country, we highlight a model of indigenous self-determination and sustainability, rooted in the international human rights movement, that deserves attention in ongoing domestic policy debates with the potential to advance the well-being of humanity more broadly.

Idaho SCT Briefs in Coeur d’Alene Water Rights Case

Here are the briefs (so far) in Coeur d’Alene Tribe v. State of Idaho:

Tribe Opening Brief

US Opening Brief

Salt Lake Tribune Editorial: “It’s time for San Juan County’s white residents to speak up for their American Indian neighbors”

Here. Try going through google news if the link doesn’t work.

Job Announcement – AILP Fellow at Colorado Law

Here:

ailp_fellow_announcement_2018_final_Page_1ailp_fellow_announcement_2018_final_Page_2

Pipeline to Law Workshop at ASU (Aug. 1-5, 2018)

Here (PDF):

Pipeline To Law Workshops - ASU 2018

Pipeline to Law Workshop at ASU Continue reading

Esquire News Profile of Ashlynne Mike Disappearance

Here is “The Delay: After an 11-year-old Navajo girl was kidnapped, her family and friends sprang into action to find her. Why did it take so long for law enforcement to join them?

Brown U/CSREA Keynote Address: Rebecca Tsosie

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Rebecca Tsosie
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Nick Laluk

San Juan County Republicans Target Navajo Candidate for County Seat

Here is “‘They’re trying to get me off the candidacy’: San Juan County is investigating one of the Navajo Democrats running in a special election.”

Here are documents submitted by Willie Greyeyes:

greyeyes atty letter

greyeyes declaration

exhibit c

exhibit d

exhibit e

press release