Natelson (Montana) on the Indian Commerce Clause

Rob Natelson (Montana) has posted “The Original Understanding of the Indian Commerce Clause” on SSRN. Here is the abstract:

The United States Congress claims plenary and exclusive power over federal affairs with the Indian tribes, based primarily on the Constitution’s Indian Commerce Clause. This article is the first comprehensive analysis of the original meaning of, and understanding behind, that constitutional provision. The author concludes that, as originally understood, congressional power over the tribes was to be neither plenary nor exclusive.

This paper has been published in the Denver University Law Review.

I’m about halfway through this paper right now. As the abstract indicates, Rob’s conclusion goes against nearly 200 years of settled Indian law, plus flatly contradicts the work of people like Bob Clinton and many others (including, I guess, myself). More later….

Lewis & Clark Tribal Economic Development Symposium

From Lewis & Clark Law School:

Spring Symposium 2008 Schedule of Events

April 4, 2008 

8:00 – 8:30 a.m. Registration and Continental Breakfast

8:30 – 8:45 a.m. Welcoming Remarks

Dean Klonoff, Associate Dean Lisa LeSage

8:45 – 9:30 a.m. Keynote Address

Kevin Gover
Introductions by Professor Robert Miller

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“Prop. 2 and Michigan American Indian Students” — Michigan Journal of Race & Law Symposium

I will be giving a short talk at the Michigan Journal of Race and Law‘s symposium on affirmative action in Michigan post-Prop. 2 this Saturday. Here are materials for my talk:

Michigan Civil Rights Commission Report — “One Michigan” at the Crossroads: An Assessment of the Impact of Proposal 06-02

MCRC Report Attachment #4 — The Michigan Indian Tuition Waiver is Based on a Political Relationship, not a Racial Classification

Michigan AG Declination to Issue Opinion re: Michigan Indian Tuition Waiver

MSU Indigenous Law & Policy Center Letter to the Michigan Law Review Commission

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Fort on ICWA and Michigan Tribal-State Court Comity

“A Review of the Indian Child Welfare Act, M.C.R. 2.615, and Tribal Court Jurisdiction in Michigan Family Law Cases,” by Kathyrn Fort.

From the Michigan Child Welfare Law Journal [scroll to page 11].

“Preconstitutional Federal Power” Article

My paper on “Preconstitutional Federal Power” has been published by the Tulane Law Review. You can download it here.

Here’s the abstract:

 In two fields of constitutional law, the Supreme Court has acknowledged that the federal government may possess preconstitutional power, or national authority derived not from the Constitution but from the very fact of sovereignty. This Article analyzes the two areas of law – the Foreign Affairs Power and the Indian Affairs Power – and assesses their viability in future cases. The case recognizing a preconstitutional Foreign Affairs Power resting with the Executive branch, United States v. Curtiss-Wright Export Corp., suffers from poor historical reasoning and has little precedential weight in modern foreign affairs cases, but has never been overruled. The Indian Affairs Power case, United States v. Lara, decided in 2004, included no historical reasoning and only offered the theory as dicta. However, the Court raised the theory, perhaps, as a means of placating the textualists on the Court who do not view the Indian Commerce Clause as a viable source of Congressional power in Indian Affairs. This Article offers a best defense for the proposition that Congressional plenary power in Indian Affairs might derive from a preconstitutional source, a defense that includes the original understanding of the Indian Affairs Power and that, unlike the Foreign Affairs Power, did survive the ratification of the Constitution.

Cooter and Fikentscher on Tribal Codes

Robert Cooter and Wolfgang Fikentscher have just published “American Indian Law Codes: Pragmatic Law and Tribal Identity” in the American Journal of Comparative Law. Here is the abstract:

The United States has recognized the power of American Indian tribes to make laws at least since 1934. Most tribes, however, did not write down many of their laws until the 1960s. Written laws have subsequently accumulated in well-organized codes, but scholars have not previously researched them. Using written materials and interviews with tribal officials, we describe the scope, motivation, and interpretation of tribal codes. With respect to scope, we found nine main types of codes that cover almost all fields of law over which tribes have jurisdiction. Few tribes have all nine types of codes. Tribes have internal and external motivations for codifying. Internal motivations include preserving culture, maintaining social order, and encouraging economic development. Financial incentives and demands for transparency supply outside motivation. Tribal officials interpret codes pragmatically, which resembles interpretation of codes in continental Europe. Finally, we note that law and justice sometimes require state or federal courts to use a tribal code to decide a case, but they seldom do so, which undermines tribal power and identity.

Indigenous Law Journal Call for Submission

The Indigenous Law Journal at the University of Toronto Faculty of Law
is accepting submissions for Volume VII (Fall 2008).  Please circulate
and post widely (Poster).

The submissions deadline is: January 21, 2008.

Political Status of Indian Tribes Article in St. John’s Law Review

My new article, “The Original Understanding of the Political Status of Indian Tribes,” published in the St. John’s Law Review is here.

Here’s the introduction:

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Stuart Banner’s New Book on Indigenous Land Dispossession

It’s called “Possessing the Pacific: Land, Settlers, and Indigenous People from Australia to Alaska.” Harvard University Press published it.

You can read all about it at the Legal History Blog.

Paul Spruhan on Indian Blood Quantum under the IRA

Paul Spruhan, a clerk for the Navajo Nation Supreme Court, has posted “Indian as Race/Indian as Political Status: Implementation of the Half-Blood Requirement under the Indian Reorganization Act, 1934-1945” on SSRN. This paper was published in the Rutgers Race and the Law Review.

Here’s the abstract:

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