Guest Post — Ray Martin on the AEI Panel with Rep. Bishop and Naomi Riley

On January 30th, 2017 the American Enterprise Institute hosted a panel discussion entitled,  How federal policy affects Native Americans: Naomi Schafer Riley on her book, ‘The New Trail of Tears: How Washington is Destroying American Indians.’ A video of the panel can be found here. On the panel with Naomi Schafer Riley (NSR) were Congressman Rob Bishop R-Utah, the Chairman of the House Natural Resources Committee which oversees Indian Affairs in the House of Representatives, Chris Edwards from the Cato Institute, and Keith Moore a former director of the Bureau of Indian Education.

The panel began with a talk from NSR regarding her book The New Trail of Tears (TNToT). The book has already been discussed at length here on Turtle Talk, Professor Fletcher’s commentary can be found here. The discussion at the American Enterprise Institute (AEI) was disheartening and alarming. NSR began by attacking the community at Pine Ridge for its poor retention of teachers, and went onto blast a former principal of a school for firing all of the Teach for America (TFA) teachers at that school because they “were too white.” While this may have once been true it is simply not the case anymore. What NSR fails to mention is that several of the Tribes in South Dakota have partnered with TFA to bring TFA to Indian reservations in South Dakota. For example in 2015, the Standing Rock Sioux Tribe formed a partnership with TFA to recruit tribal members to become teachers in reservation schools. In 2013, the Rosebud Sioux Tribe passed a resolution supporting TFA and its efforts on their reservation; this followed a similar resolution passed by the Ogalala Sioux Tribal Council as well, supporting TFA’s efforts on Pine Ridge. Just over a year ago, the Rapid City Journal documented the ongoing relationship between TFA on Rosebud and Standing Rock, as well as at the Red Cloud Indian School on Pine Ridge.  Rather than giving her audience all of the information regarding the decisions that Tribal leaders are making to support the development of their youth, NSR retreats to portraying reservations as bleak and hopeless places where no child has a chance at receiving a decent education. Her claim that Tribes in South Dakota are unable or unwilling to partner with organizations like TFA does not stand on its merits, and is likely confined to the one incident in her talk, in which she cites an unnamed source. Continue reading

Charles Wilkinson to Deliver Canby Lecture This Evening

Here are details.

Webcast info here.

Photographer Matika Wilbur at King County Library in Auburn, WA

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Happy Thanksgiving: We Give You Sarah Deer’s Langston Hughes Lecture at KU

Gendering Federal Indian Law: Here (via ALI Adviser).

 

Harvard Law’s Indigenous Rights Conference Agenda

Download agenda here.  Conference is in Massachusetts on October 13-14, 2016.

Tribal Protection Order Webinar Series

The National Council of Juvenile and Family Court Judges, the Tribal Law and Policy Institute, and the National Congress of American Indians are hosting a webinar series on tribal protection orders. Each webinar will be 30 minutes with additional time for Question and Answer. Participants may attend one or more webinars, there are no prerequisites to attend any webinar. All webinars will be archived on tribalprotectionorder.org.

Please register for the topic(s), date and time that works best for you. The registration links are located below each topic description.

1) Issuing tribal protection orders – This webinar will discuss how to craft tribal protection orders, what language must be included in a tribal protection order, and how to meet the Violence Against Women Act (VAWA) full faith and credit provision.

Tue, Sep 13, 2016 11:00 AM – 12:00 PM PDT
Registration URL: https://attendee.gotowebinar.com/register/586317150921405955
Webinar ID: 144-585-971

2) Enforcing protection orders generally and for VAWA Special Domestic Violence Criminal Jurisdiction over non-Indian (SDVCJ) cases – This webinar will discuss how to enforce tribal protection orders through: criminal prosecution, criminal contempt, and civil contempt. Enforcing tribal protection order under the VAWA SDVCJ will also be addressed.

Tue, Sep 20, 2016 11:00 AM – 12:00 PM PDT
Registration URL: https://attendee.gotowebinar.com/register/2166778254430826243
Webinar ID: 118-977-555

3) Contempt and tribal protection orders – This webinar will discuss what powers judges have to maintain the safety, order and integrity of the court while issuing and enforcing tribal protection orders.

Tue, Sep 27, 2016 11:00 AM – 12:00 PM PDT
Registration URL: https://attendee.gotowebinar.com/register/6100405347613417219
Webinar ID: 121-647-987

Panelists: Honorable Steven D. Aycock, (Ret.), Judge-in-Residence, National Council of Juvenile and Family Court Judges, Honorable Kelly Gaines Stoner, Victim Advocacy Legal Specialist, Tribal Law and Policy Institute and Judge, Seminole Nation of Oklahoma

Facilitators: Virginia Davis, Senior Policy Advisor, National Congress of American Indians, Chia Halpern Beetso, Tribal Court Specialist, Tribal Law and Policy Institute

This webinar series is a part of a series of VAWA Special Domestic Violence Criminal Jurisdiction over non-Indians webinars. For past webinars please see: http://www.ncai.org/tribal-vawa. Past webinars include – Jury Pools and Selection, Defendant’s Rights, Victims’ Rights, Prosecution Skills, and Code Revision & Drafting. For further information on VAWA SDVCJ and protection orders, please visit: www.NCAI.org/tribal-vawa ; http://www.tribal-institute.org/lists/vawa_2013.htm ; www.TribalProtectionOrder.org.

After registering, you will receive a confirmation email containing information about joining the webinar.

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Little Traverse Historical Society: “A Bitter Memory” The Burn-Out at Burt Lake

Rick Wiles History Talk FREE
WHEN: Thursday, July 28th, 7-8pm
WHERE: 100 Depot Court Petoskey, MI
MORE INFORMATION
Rick Wiles is a retired teacher from the Public Schools of Petoskey who writes historical white papers for the Mackinac Journal. He will discuss the October 1900 burning of the Cheboiganing Band’s Village.

Black Hills CLE Coming Up July 22 in Rapid City

Don’t miss the Black Hills settlement CLE Course July 22 in Rapid City, S.D.

Register today for ILTF’s Continuing Legal Education (CLE) course on the Black Hills settlement. The course, which is open to the public, will cover the Black Hills Claim (Docket 148-78) and the 1851 Treaty Title Claim (Docket 74).

The course will be held at the Comfort Suites Hotel and Convention Center in Rapid City, S.D., on Friday, July 22, 2016 from 10 a.m. to noon.

Click here to register now

The fee to attend is $200 for attorneys receiving CLE credits. Admission is free for law students and the Governor of South Dakota. Others may attend for a nominal contribution of $30 to ILTF to help offset costs of the event. Refreshments will be provided.

Instructor: Mario Gonzalez, Esq. of the Gonzalez Law Firm in Rapid City. Mr. Gonzalez has worked as an attorney for the Oglala Sioux Tribe and other tribal entities for more than 30 years. He is an expert on the Black Hills settlement.

Please direct questions about the Black Hills CLE to Nichlas Emmons at nemmons@iltf.org

Nebraska State Bar Indian Law Section CLE

Nebraska Bar ILS CLE

The Nebraska State Bar Indian Law Section will be hosting an Indian Law CLE that will focus on Indian Law 101 information for jurisdiction, ICWA, and tribal court practice.

The CLE will be webcast, so other attorneys from other states can register and gain CLE credit.