Agenda here. Most posts as the day progresses.




Agenda here. Most posts as the day progresses.




Here:
Lower court materials here.

November 4th, 2021 | 2:15pm-3:30pm ET | 1.25 CLE
Although the 5th Circuit decision in Brackeen v. Haaland has consumed the ICWA conversation for the last few years, the decision has limited impact. This panel will focus on continuing protections for Indian children. Panelists will discuss other legal methods to protect Indian children, such as state Indian child welfare legislation, and amendments to the federal ICWA.
April Olson: Attorney, Rothstein Donatelli LLP
Kate Fort: Director of Clinics, Michigan State University College of Law
Austin Moore: Attorney, Native American Disability Law Center
Moderator – Cassondra Church: Legal Counselor, Indigenous Law & Policy Center, Michigan State University College of Law
I developed a short paper for the Federal Reserve Bank’s series on Racism and the Economy, “Systemic Racism and the Dispossession of Indigenous Wealth in the United States,” posted here.
Here is a video of today’s program. April Youpee-Roll was part of the program, too, and provided important commentary on heirship and federal Indian policy.

Toward Freedom: Photo Essay: Indigenous Struggle Against Enbridge Lines 3 and 5
UP Matters: Providing “Hope Not Handcuffs” at the Bay Mills Police Department
UP Matters: Bay Mills President Whitney Gravelle shares the impact of intergenerational trauma on addiction
UP Matters: Preventing addiction using a cultural approach in Native communities
Peninsula Press: Indigenous groups demand shut down of Michigan pipeline
Deadline Detroit: Reporting On Indian Boarding School Is Painfully Personal For Michigan Journalist
MLive: Dozens of Michigan schools still use Native American slurs, imagery

Native News Online: Washington Tribe Waits to Resume Whaling
Tribal Business News: Puyallup Tribe inks deal with Amazon for massive sorting center on tribal land
Tampa Bay Times: Florida officials and Tribe win Round 1 in legal fight over sports betting
Times Standard: Humboldt County supes OK deal between Child Welfare Services, Hoopa Valley Tribe
The Spokesman-Review: Homesteading family’s lasting legacy realized in agreement to return nearly 10,000 acres of habitat to Colville Tribes in conservation deal
Williston Herald: MHA Nation family’s oil spill suit dismissed after discovery sanctions limited damages to $1

Michigan Indian Legal Services and Uniting Three Fires Against Violence present a discussion with New York Times Best-Selling Author, Angeline Boulley. The author of Firekeeper’s Daughter will present with special legal guests and discuss the book, domestic violence, and criminal jurisdiction on tribal lands. The discussion will provide an interesting dissection of the relevant topics, along with the book’s unique setting in Michigan’s Upper Peninsula. Audience members are encouraged to bring their questions.
Hosted on MILS Facebook page. You do not need a Facebook account to watch our live event. Just login at https://bit.ly/MichiganIndianLegalServices and you can view with us.
Pre-Registration (optional) here
Free and open to all
Angeline Boulley, Author of Firekeeper’s Daughter
Jeff Davis, of Counsel with Barnes & Thornburg, LLP, former AUSA Western District of Michigan
Hon. Jocelyn K. Fabry, Chief Judge of the Sault Ste. Marie Tirbe of Chippewa Indians Tribal Court
Hon. Melissa L. Pope, Chief Judge of the Nottawaseppi Huron Band of the Potowatomi Tribal Court


The Rennard Strickland Lecture Series was established in 2006 to honor the legacy of Dean Rennard Strickland and to build on his contributions to the field of Indian law and to legal education. The theme of the lecture series is the examination of native leadership and vision for environmental stewardship in the 21st century. This year’s speaker will be

Here is the opinion in West Flagler Associates Ltd. v. DeSantis (N.D. Fla.):
Briefs are here.
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