New Scholarship by Sarah Krakoff on Race, Tribal Membership, and Tribal Sovereignty

Sarah Krakoff has posted her new paper, “Inextricably Political: Race, Membership and Tribal Sovereignty,” forthcoming from the Washington Law Review, on SSRN. Here is the abstract:

Courts address equal protection questions about the distinct legal treatment of American Indian tribes in the following dichotomous way: are classifications concerning American Indians “racial or political?” If the classification is political (i.e. based on federally recognized tribal status or membership in a federally recognized tribe) then courts will not subject it to heightened scrutiny. If the classification is racial rather than political, then courts may apply heightened scrutiny. This article challenges the dichotomy itself. The legal categories “tribe” and “tribal member” are themselves political, and reflect the ways in which tribes and tribal members have been racialized by U.S. laws and policies.

First, the article traces the evolution of tribes from pre-contact independent sovereigns to their current status as “federally recognized tribes.” This history reveals that the federal government’s objective of minimizing the tribal land base entailed a racial logic that was reflected in decisions about when and how to recognize tribal status. The logic was that of elimination: Indian people had to disappear in order to free territory for non-Indian settlement. The Article then examines two very distinct tribal places, the Colorado River Indian Tribes’ (CRIT) reservation and the former Dakota (Sioux) Nation of the Great Plains. The United States’ policies had different effects on the CRIT (where four distinct ethnic and linguistic groups were consolidated into one tribe) and the Sioux (where related ethnic and linguistic groups were scattered apart), but the causal structures were the same. Indian people stood in the way of non-Indian settlement, and federal policies defined tribes and their land base with the goal of shrinking both. Despite these goals, the CRIT and Sioux Tribes have exercised their powers of self-governance and created homelands that foster cultural survival for their people. Like other federally recognized tribes, they have used the given legal structure to perpetuate their own forms of indigenous governance, notwithstanding the law’s darker origins.

The legal histories of CRIT and the Sioux Tribes reveal that unraveling the logic of racism in American Indian law has less to do with tinkering with current equal protection doctrine than it does with recognizing the workings of power, politics, and law in the context of the United States’ unique brand of settler colonialism. The way to counter much of the prior racial discrimination against American Indians is to support laws that perpetuate the sovereign political status of tribes, rather than to dismantle tribes by subjecting them to judicial scrutiny in a futile attempt to disentangle the racial from the political.

HIGHLY recommended!

Update in Vann v. Interior & Cherokee Nation v. Nash

The Cherokee Nation has voluntarily dismissed their claims against the feds in Cherokee Nation v. Nash:

Cherokee nation vs nash order 8 21 2012 feds

The feds have an outstanding counterclaim against the Nation and so they remain parties.

In the D.C. Circuit appeal, Vann v. Interior, here is Vann’s reply brief:

2012-08-30 Reply Brief of Appellants Marilyn Vann et al

Prior briefs are here.

Fletcher on “Tribal Membership and Indian Nationhood”

I just posted a short paper prepared for an American Indian Law Review symposium on Indians and identity. The paper, “Tribal Membership and Indian Nationhood,” is a sort of sequel to my NYT’s piece on the Cherokee Freedmen (link to that whole debate is here).

Here is the abstract of the new paper:

American Indian tribes are in a crisis of identity. No one can rationally devise a boundary line between who is an American Indian and who is not. Despite this, each federally recognized tribe has devised a legal standard to apply in deciding who is a member and who is not. Even with some ambiguity and much litigation, these are relatively bright lines. Some Indians are eligible for membership, and others are not eligible. In some rare circumstances, some non-Indians are eligible and become members. However, these bright line rules are crude instruments for determining identity, and often generate outcomes that conflict with legitimate Indian identity.

This paper is about Indian tribes and Indian nations. For purposes of this discussion, there is a difference between the two. I hope to discuss how Indian tribes, shackled to some extent by these intractable questions, can develop into Indian nations. I believe there is room in the American constitutional structure for Indian nations.

I will define what I mean by Indian nationhood. I draw from pre-contact and early post-contact Anishinaabe history to reinvigorate what nationhood meant traditionally. I argue that nations must allow nonmembers some form of political power, though I leave specific details to others. I conclude by arguing that Indian nationhood, in the long-run, is a laudable and perhaps even mandatory goal for modern tribal communities’ survival.

Update to Lewis v. Salazar — Claims to Table Mountain Rancheria Membership

Here are the federal and tribal briefs in the Ninth Circuit appeal:

Brief for Federal Appellees

Brief for Tribal Appellees

Lower court materials here.

Allen v. Smith — Federal Civil Rights Complaint against Pala Band Executive Committee over Disenrollments

Here is the complaint:

Allen v Smith Complaint

Response Briefs in Freedmen Appeal of Rule 19 Dismissal of Vann v. Interior

Here are those briefs:

Cherokee Nation Brief [defending the Rule 19 dismissal]

Interior Brief [arguing against Rule 19 dismissal]

The opening brief is here.

 

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Update in Cherokee Nation v. Nash (Cherokee Freedmen Case)

Here are new materials filed by the Freedmen and the feds against the Cherokee Nation:

Federal Answer to Amended Complaint

Federal Counterclaim

118-1 Attachment

Freedmen Amended Answer — Counterclaims — Cross Claims

Freedmen Exhibits

News coverage here.

Update in Alto v. Salazar (San Pasqual Disenrollment Challenge)

We left it in December with the court enjoining Interior from removing the Alto plaintiffs from the San Pasqual Band rolls. Here are additional materials leading to last week’s order denying the tribe’s motion to dissolve the order:

San Pasqual Motion to Dissolve PI

San Pasqual Motion to Dismiss

Interior Response

Alto Response to Motion to Dismiss

San Pasqual Reply in Support of Motion to Dismiss

San Pasqual Reply in Support of Motion to Dissolve

DCT Order Denying Motion to Dissolve

And now pending responses:

Alto Motion for Summary J

Colville Suit against IHS over Declination of Emergency Medical Services Self-Governance Compact Increase

Here is the complaint in Confederated Colville Tribes v. Sebelius (D. Or.):

Colville Complaint

Briefing in Cahto Tribe Appeal of Federal Order to Re-Enroll Disenrollees

Here are the Ninth Circuit briefs in Cahto Tribe of the Laytonville Rancheria v. Dutschke:

Cahto Opening Brief

BIA Answering Brief

Sloan Family Amicus Brief

Cahto Reply

lower court materials here.