Flandreau Santee Sioux Issue RFP for Part-Time Tribal Prosecutor

Download request for proposals here.

Amended Ramah Findings and Conclusions

Download Findings of Fact & Conclusions of Law here.

Link to previous coverage here.

Suit over Jackpile Uranium Mine Cleanup Proceeds

Here are the materials in Atlantic Richfield Co. v. United States (D. N.M.):

32 US Motion to Dismiss

34 Laguna Construction Co Motion to Dismiss

36 Laguna Pueblo Motion to Dismiss

46 AR Response to US Motion

47 AR Response to Pueblo Motion

48 AR Response to LCC Motion

63 LCC Reply

64 US Reply

67 Pueblo Reply

71 DCT Order Granting US Motion

73 DCT Order Partially Granting Pueblo Motion

75 DCT Order Denying LCC Motion

Complaint here.

Eastern Band Cherokee Seek Tribal Operations Director

The Tribal Council of the Eastern Band of Cherokee Indians is accepting applications for a Director of Tribal Operations.  Applicant will report directly to the Tribal Council Chairman and will provide service to the Legislative Branch of Government.  Must hold a JD Degree from an American Bar Association accredited law school.  Must be eligible for or admitted to the practice of law in the State of North Carolina and be a member in good standing of the North Carolina State Bar.  The Director of Tribal Operations must be eligible to or admitted to practice before the Federal, State and EBCI Court.  Attorney with a minimum of seven years experience and knowledge of Indian Law, including administrative and management experience.  Eighteen to twenty-four months in the position would be necessary.

Send Resumes to Kelly Sampson, EBCI Tribal Operations Program PO BOX 455 Cherokee, NC 28719, email kelllong@nc-cherokee.com or fax (828)497-5927.  Phone (828)359-7023

Ninth Circuit Briefs in U.S. v. Washington Subproceeding 11-02 (Lummi v. S’Klallam Tribes & Tulalip)

Here are the materials in United States v. Washington (subproceeding 11-02):

Lummi Nation Brief

Tulalip Tribes Answer Brief

Port Gamble and Jamestown S’Klallam Tribes Brief

Lower Elwha Brief

Lummi Reply

Suquamish Tribe Brief

Oral argument video here.

Penobscot Nation Hiring Deputy Court Clerk

Download job announcement here.

Johnsen on the Economics of the Potlatch

Bruce Johnsen has posted “The Potlatch as Fractional Reserve Banking” on SSRN, forthcoming in Unlocking the Wealth of Indian Nations, edited by Terry L. Anderson. Here is the quick description:

This chapter focuses on the Northwest Coast Tribes’ early capital markets and specifically on how their potlatch system served as a system of fractional reserve banking to expand their money supply and finance wealth enhancing investments.

Clarkson, Spilde, and Claw Nez on Tribal Online Commerce

Gavin Clarkson, Kate Spilde, and Carma Claw Nez have posted “Online Sovereignty: The Law and Economics of Tribal Electronic Commerce” on SSRN.

Here is the abstract:

In 1886, the US Supreme Court wrote that, for Indian tribes, “the people of the states where they are found are often their deadliest enemies.” Recently, state agencies and regulators have continued that tradition of hostility by improperly attempting to regulate electronic commerce businesses operated by tribal governments that are more properly subject to regulations established by tribal law and subject to federal oversight. Despite the fact that these online businesses operate exclusively under tribal law and make their tribal affiliation clear to customers, certain state regulators have demanded absolute compliance with state law, even when such laws are from states thousands of miles away. Not only does this overreaching by uninformed state regulators limit the products available to consumers but it also severely undercuts on-reservation economic development, imperils tribal electronic commerce, and challenges basic notions of tribal sovereignty.

Businesses and consumers entering into commercial contracts rely heavily on consistency and predictability in contracting, including when the parties mutually agree to apply tribal law or utilize tribal courts to resolve disputes. Uniform interpretation and enforcement of such agreements are critical to ensuring continued investment in tribal businesses. With over one quarter of American Indians living in poverty, nearly twice the national average, it has never been more important to promote confidence in the Indian economy. When courts do not give full force and effect to contracting parties’ desire to resolve their private disputes using tribal courts and tribal law, this confidence is threatened. While it is unclear how this controversy will ultimately play out, one thing is certain: states are not only undermining tribal innovation and harming tribal economies but also attacking tribal sovereignty itself.

Perhaps lost in the legal rancor, however, are the very real human and economic consequences of the loss of tribal revenues from e-commerce business, as well as the potential damage to tribal e-commerce as a whole. In this article, we present results of our empirical research into the economic impact of tribal online lending in Indian Country. We first frame the issue with a brief summary of the legal foundations for tribal e-commerce and tribal lending in particular. We then present several case studies of tribes that have engaged in online lending, focusing on the direct economic impact to those tribal communities. We conclude the article with policy arguments as to why state and federal regulators should support rather than suppress tribal e-commerce, including tribal small-dollar online lending.

University of Colorado to Host Panel on Indigenous Peoples and Climate Justice

Here:

 

The Center for Values and Social Policy
 and
 The Center for Native American and Indigenous Studies

present a panel discussion on
Indigenous Peoples and Climate Justice

Tuesday, March 1st
5:00-6:30
Hellems Room 252

 

Featured Speakers:
            Sarah A Krakoff: Professor of Law, University of Colorado Law School
                       “Tribal Self-Determination, Cultural Survival, and Climate Justice”
           Heather Lazrus: Project Scientist, National Center for Atmospheric Research
                        “Rising Voices of Indigenous People in Weather and Climate Science and Policy”
            Kyle Whyte: Associate Professor of Philosophy, Michigan State University
“Indigenous Climate Justice, Collective Continuance and Settler Colonialism”
This event is free and open to the public.
No registration is required.

Co-sponsors: the Department of Philosophy, Department of Ethnic Studies, the Environmental Studies Program, and the Getches-Wilkinson Center for Natural Resources, Energy, and the Environment.