The City of Pocatello is petitioning for certiorari in this subproceeding in the Snake River General Stream Adjudication.
Here is the Idaho Supreme Court decision.
The City of Pocatello is petitioning for certiorari in this subproceeding in the Snake River General Stream Adjudication.
Here is the Idaho Supreme Court decision.
Bob Anderson has posted his paper, “Alaska Native Rights, Statehood, and Unfinished Business,” published in the Tulsa Law Review, on SSRN. Here is the abstract:
Alaska Native aboriginal rights to land and associated resources were never dealt with in a comprehensive fashion until 1971, when Congress passed the Alaska Native Lands Claims Settlement Act. Although general principles of federal Indian law provided strong support for the proposition that Alaska’s Native people held aboriginal title to much of the new state, the Alaska Statehood Act itself carefully disclaimed any effect on aboriginal title. This approach was in keeping with the Congress’s past dealings with Alaska Native property rights. This article outlines the history of Alaska Native aboriginal rights through the Statehood Act along with their post-statehood treatment in the Alaska Native Claims Settlement Act and the Alaska National Interest Lands Conservation Act. The article closes with a look at the unsatisfactory treatment of two important aboriginal rights – access to fish and game and tribal sovereignty – and suggests that these areas should be revisited in consultation with Alaska Native peoples.
This case concerns an attempt by the Western Shoshone bands to secure a remedy against to the United States denied in the U.S. v. Dann case.
Here is the brief — south-fork-band-v-us-cert-petition
Here are the briefs in a claim pending before the Ninth Circuit that state hunting laws are violative of the equal protection clause as discrimination against non-Indians.
The questions presented are:
Whether the State of Washington Cigarette Tax laws are federally preempted and inapplicable to an American Indian motor carrier hauling cigarettes between Indian reservations in Interstate and Indian Commerce.
Whether the laws of the State of Washington can regulate an enrolled tribal Indian shipping goods between a federally recognized Indian Reservation in Idaho to his business on the reservation of his membership located in the State of Washington.
Marcia Zug of South Carolina Law School has published “Gone but not Forgotten: The Strange Afterlife of the Jay Treaty’s Indian Free Passage Right” in the Queen’s Law Journal. Here is the abstract:
From Indianz:
Stacy Leeds, a professor at the University of Kansas School of Law, will develop a comprehensive history of the Freedmen of the Cherokee Nation for a fellowship she was awarded by the Fletcher Foundation.
Leeds, a tribal member, was a former justice for the Cherokee Nation’s highest court. She wrote the decision that said the Freedmen were entitled to citizenship. Leeds subsequently ran for chief but lost to incumbent Chad Smith. Smith believes the tribe has a right to deny citizenship to the Freedmen. Leeds was awarded $50,000 fellowship and must complete her project within a year.
Get the Story:
Kansas Law Professor Named Fletcher Fellow (DIVERSE 7/10)
Friend of CAHC awarded Fletcher Fellowship (The Muskogee Phoenix 7/10)
Cherokee Nation Judicial Appeals Tribunal Decision in Freedmen Case:
Allen v. Cherokee Nation (March 7, 2006)
Kristen Carpenter has published her excellent paper “Real Property and Peoplehood” in the Stanford Environmental Law Journal. Here is the abstract:
The district court in CECGAC v. Hogen held that the NIGC’s determination that Seneca gaming at its Buffalo parcel was valid under the land claims settlement exception was arbitrary and capricious, because no extant Seneca land claim existed at the time of the time of the settlement.
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