Gun Lake Tribe Archivist Position

Here:

20.10 THPO Archives and Collections Coordinator JD

Oklahoma Trial Court Confirms Chickasaw Reservation Remains Extant

Here are the materials in Bosse v. State of Oklahoma (McClain Dist. Ct.):

9-23-2020 Bosse Brief

9-23-2020 Chickasaw Nation Amicus Brief

9-29-2020 State Brief

10-13-2020 DCT Order

This case is on remand from the appellate court, materials here.

DFP: “Group thinks it has found proof of 10,000-year-old, Ice Age culture in Straits of Mackinac”

Here.

The implications for Line 5 are enormous.

USNWR: “Native Americans in Minnesota Keep COVID-19 at Bay”

Here.

Ninth Circuit Oral Argument Video in Yazzie v. Hobbs [voting rights appeal]

Here:

Briefs are here.

Materials in Alaska’s Effort to Deny Subsistence Hunt to Village of Kake

Here are the materials so far in State of Alaska v. Federal Subsistence Board (D. Alaska):

1 Complaint

3-1 Motion for Injunction — GMU 13 Closure

4-1 Motion for Injunction

15 Federal Response to 4

18 Federal Response to 3

20-1 Kake Motion to Intervene

22 Reply in Support of 4

24 Reply in Support of 3

27 DCt Order Granting Motion to Intervene

28 DCt Order Denying Motion for Injunction 3

High Country News profile here.

538: “Hundreds Of Schools Are Still Using Native Americans As Team Mascots”

Here.

Indian Country Today Profile of Amy Coney Barrett

Here.

Alex Skibine on the Tribal Right to Exclude Nonmembers

Alexander Tallchief Skibine has posted “The Tribal Right to Exclude Non-Tribal Members from Indian-Owned Lands,” forthcoming from the American Indian Law Review, on SSRN.

Here is the abstract:

In 1981, the Supreme Court issued its decision in Montana v. United States, severely restricting the ability of Indian Tribes to assume civil regulatory and adjudicatory jurisdiction over non-tribal members for activities taking place on non-Indian lands within Indian reservations. The Court in Montana stated that “it could readily agree” with the Court of Appeals’ holding that the tribe could regulate the conduct of non-member on tribal lands. Yet, twenty years later, the Court issued its opinion in Nevada v. Hicks holding that in certain circumstances, the jurisdiction of Indian tribes could also be limited even if the activities of the non-members took place on Indian-owned lands.

It has been almost twenty years since Hicks and because of the cryptic and fractured nature of that decision, the federal circuits are divided and still trying to figure out under what circumstances tribal civil jurisdiction over non-members should be restricted when these activities take place on Indian-owned lands.

In this Article, I argue that among all the possible interpretations of Hicks, the one adopted by the Ninth Circuit makes the most sense. Under that interpretation, the so-called Montana framework used to divest tribes of jurisdiction is not applicable to cases where a tribe has retained the right to exclude. I argue that Hicks can be reasonably conceptualized as endorsing the 9th Circuit methodology. However, I also argue that Hicks should have been decided as a state jurisdiction cases and not a tribal divestiture of inherent sovereignty case. Re-imagining Hicks as a state jurisdiction case would not have changed the outcome but would have avoided the last twenty years of confusion surrounding how Hicks should be interpreted.

Highly recommended!