Stephanie Barclay & Michalyn Steele on Indian Sacred Sites

Stephanie H. Barclay & Michalyn Steele have posted “Rethinking Protections for Indigenous Sacred Sites,” forthcoming in the Harvard Law Review.

Here is the abstract:

Meaningful access to sacred sites is among the most important principles to the religious exercise of indigenous peoples, yet tribes have been repeatedly thwarted by the federal government in their efforts to vindicate this practice of their religion. The colonial, state, and federal governments of this Nation have been desecrating and destroying Native American sacred sites since before the Republic was formed. Unfortunately, the callous destruction of indigenous sacred sites is not just a troubling relic of the past. Rather, the threat to sacred sites and cultural resources continues today in the form of spoliation from development, as well as in the significant barriers to meaningful access indigenous peoples face.

Scholars concerned about government failure to protect indigenous sacred sites have generally agreed that the problem stems from the unique nature of indigenous spiritual traditions as being too distinct from non-indigenous religious traditions familiar to courts and legislators and therefore eluding protection afforded to other traditions. By contrast, this Article approaches the problem from an entirely different angle: we focus instead on the similarities between government coercion with respect to indigenous religious exercise and other non-indigenous religious practices. We illustrate how the debate about sacred sites unwittingly partakes of longstanding philosophical debates about the nature of coercion itself—a phenomenon that has previously gone unnoticed by scholars. This Article argues that whether or not one formally labels the government’s actions as “coercive,” the important question is whether the government is bringing to bear its sovereign power in a way that inhibits the important ideal of religious voluntarism—the ability of individuals to voluntarily practice their religious exercise consistent with their own free self-development. Indeed, this is precisely the sort of question courts ask when evaluating government burdens on non-indigenous religious exercise. The failure to ask this same question about voluntarism for indigenous religious practices has created a double standard, wherein the law recognizes a much more expansive notion of coercion for contexts impacting non-indigenous religious practices, and a much narrower conception of coercion, in the tradition of Robert Nozick, when it comes to indigenous sacred sites.

This egregious double standard in the law ought to be revisited. Doing so would have two important implications. First, when coercion is viewed clearly, tribal members and indigenous practitioners should be able to prove a prima facie case under statutes like the Religious Freedom Restoration Act (RFRA) much more easily. Second, this Article makes the novel claim that clearer understanding of the coercive control government exercises over sacred sites should animate a strong obligation under the government’s trust responsibility and plenary power doctrine to provide more—rather than less—robust protection of indigenous sacred sites.

Highly recommended!!!

Zoom Video for Bridging Michigan: Eric Hemenway & Matthew L.M. Fletcher

Here.

Bridging Michigan: Eric Hemenway & Matthew L.M. Fletcher in Conversation (Today, 7PM)

Register here:

bridging-michigan-cover-slide-Sept-1

As part of Michigan Humanities’ commitment to dialogue around critical issues and their connection to the humanities, we are coordinating Bridging Michigan, an online conversation series this summer and fall with a focus on the history of systemic inequities, their current impacts on health, education, and Indigenous rights, and the ways that the arts and humanities are active parts of creating real change.

On Thursday, September 3, from 7 to 8 p.m. (EDT) join Michigan Humanities for an online conversation featuring Eric Hemenway and Matthew L.M. Fletcher discussing the history and current state of Native mascots.

Webinars on Indigenous Peoples & Intellectual Property for Indigenous Leaders, Lawyers, and Community Members

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You can see the PDF here.

HCN Interview of Hillary Hoffmann and Monte Mills on Their New Book “A Third Way: Decolonizing the Laws of Indigenous Cultural Protection”

Here.

Jenni Monet: “Indian Country’s ANWR: How an Iñupiat Trump Official, Tara Sweeney, is challenging everything you know about Indigenous environmentalism”

From the Indigenously site, article here.

Tribal Petition to Stop Enbridge Line 3

Here:

Honor the Earth + White Earth + Red Lake Petition

Annette Saunooke Clapsaddle: “Writing in the Ancestral Cherokee Homeland”

Here.

Annette’s YA novel, Even As We Breathe, is available here.

Tribe Sues over Border Wall

Here is the complaint in La Posta Band of Diegueno Mission Indians of the La Posta Reservation v. Trump (S.D. Cal.):

1 Complaint

Updated:

14-1 Motion for Injunction

21 Response

22 Reply

26 DCt Order