“The Three Lives of Mamengwaa: Toward an Indigenous Canon of Construction” Article Now Published By Yale

Here.

Abstract:

For too long, tribal judiciaries have been an afterthought in the story of tribal self-determination. Until the last half-century, many tribal nations relied on federally administered courts or had no court systems at all. As tribal nations continue to develop their law-enforcement and police powers, tribal justice systems now play a critical role in tribal self-determination. But because tribal codes and constitutions tend to borrow extensively from federal and state law, tribal judges find themselves forced to apply and enforce laws that are poor cultural fits for Indian communities—an unfortunate reality that hampers tribal judges’ ability to regulate and improve tribal governance.

Even where tribal legislatures leave room for tribal judges to apply tribal customary law, the results are haphazard at best. This Article surveys a sample of tribal-court decisions that have used customary law to regulate tribal governance. Tribal judges have interpreted customary law when it is expressly incorporated into tribal positive law, they have looked to customary law to provide substantive rules of decision, and they have relied on customary law as an interpretive tool. Reliance on customary law is ascendant, but still rare, in tribal courts.

Recognizing that Indian country will continue to rely on borrowed laws, and aiming to empower tribal courts to advance tribal governance, this Article proposes that tribal judges adopt an Indigenous canon of construction of tribal laws. Elevating a thirty-year-old taxonomy first articulated by Chief Justice Irvin in Stepetin v. Nisqually Indian Community, this Article recommends that tribal judges seek out and apply tribal customary law in cases where (1) the relevant doctrine arose in federal or state statutes or common law; (2) the tribal nation has not explicitly adopted federal or state law on a given issue in writing; (3) written tribal law was adopted or shifted as a result of the colonizer’s pressure and interests; and (4) tribal custom is inconsistent with the written tribal law, most especially if the law violates the relational philosophies of that tribal nation. Tribal judiciaries experienced at applying tribal customary law will be better positioned to do justice in Indian country.

Bibeau v. Commissioner of Internal Revenue Cert Petition

Here:

Lower court materials here.

Creek Nation Sues Prosecutors, Too

Here is the complaint in Muscogee (Creek) Nation v. Ballard (N.D. Okla.):

Here is the complaint in Muscogee (Creek) Nation v. Iski (N.D. Okla.):

Second Circuit Rejects Unkechauge Eeling Rights

Here is the opinion in Unkechauge Indian Nation v. Seggos.

Briefs here.

Eighth Circuit Affirms Cattle Impoundment Decision

Here is the opinion in Temple v. Mercier.

Briefs:

Temple Brief

Federal Brief

Tribal Brief

Reply

Lower court materials here.

Chinook Wins $117K Attorney Fee Award over Federal Acknowledgement Dispute

Here are the new materials in Chinook Indian Nation v. Haaland (W.D. Wash.):

Prior post here.

Montana SCT Briefs in County Effort to Force Reimbursement for PL280 Costs

Here are the briefs in Lake County v. State of Montana:

Tribal Amicus Brief in FCC v. Consumers’ Research [SCOTUS]

Here:

Fourth Circuit Briefs in Winnebago Tribe v. Dept. of the Army

Here:

Winnebago Opening Brief

Joint Appendix

Federal Answer Brief

Great Plains Tribal Leaders Health Board Amicus Brief

Sisseton and Spirit Lake Amicus Brief

USET Amicus Brief

Reply

Lower court materials here.

Amicus Briefs here:

Illinois SCT Dismisses Forest County Potawatomi Challenge to State Gaming Licensure Procedures as Moot Caused Challenged Licenses Have Already Been Issued, “Too Bad, So Sad” Theory Prevails

Here is the opinion in Waukegan Potawatomi Casino LLC v. Illinois Gaming Board:

Bill Wood