Here (MSU NALSA Climate Change Event PDF):

Opinion in re Sharpe v. Sharpe (Alaska Jan. 8 2016)
In a 3-2 decision, Alaska’s Supreme Court has affirmed a lower court’s decision denying a motion for modification of child support to an Yup’ik Eskimo who the court believed was unreasonably unemployed when she quit her $120k job in Anchorage for a traditional way of life as a stay-at-home mom in the Native village of Stebbins Community Association.
Excerpt from Justice Bolger’s majority opinion:
Despite this consideration, the dissent worries that the superior court “trivialize[s] Alaska Natives’ way of life”60 and “devalues Alaska Natives’ cultural, spiritual, and religious connections to their villages and their subsistence lifestyle.”61 Yet in reality the dissent’s desired outcome would have enormous financial implications for Alaska Native children. “The primary purpose of Rule 90.3 is to ensure that child support orders are adequate to meet the needs of children, subject to the ability of parents to pay.”62 Granting either parent absolute freedom to exit the workforce would undermine this purpose.
Relevant excerpt from Justice Winfree’s dissent:
The fundamental flaw in the superior court’s analysis is its conflation of the legitimacy of Jolene’s move with the reasonableness of her unemployment in Stebbins and the manner in which the court imputed income to Jolene: “[T]he choice that I’m presented with is between treating [Jolene] as having zero income or . . . having imputed to her the income that she had at Alyeska . . . .” This was a false choice. The questions that should have been posed and answered at the hearing were: (1) whether Jolene’s move to Stebbins was for legitimate reasons; (2) whether Jolene was in fact unreasonably unemployed in Stebbins; and if so, (3) what level of income should have been imputed to Jolene based on her work history, her qualifications, and her job opportunities in Stebbins. 36
The court found that Jolene’s decision to leave her employment in Anchorage and relocate to Stebbins to reconnect with her cultural roots was unreasonable because Jolene had not “established that her situation in Anchorage was destructive or adverse to her” given that there was no evidence “that she suffered from mental illness or from some sort of emotional state or psychological state that she needed to leave the urban setting, that she needed medically or psychologically or spiritually to leave Anchorage.” But we never have required relocating parents to show that their prior locations were destructive to them or that they suffered from psychological conditions or mental illnesses to justify their relocation. Moreover the court’s statements are at odds with its earlier custody decisions favoring Jyzyk based on Jolene’s alcohol issues and with the evidence that Jolene’s alcohol issues began shortly after she started working for Alyeska.37 To the extent the court today silently approves the superior court’s reliance on “no destructive situation” and “no mental illness” factors to decide that a relocation is not legitimate, I strongly disagree.
In my view, even without considering Jolene’s express Free Exercise claim raised on appeal, her relocation to Stebbins was legitimate — to the extent the superior court made a factual finding that Jolene’s move to Stebbins was not legitimate, that finding is clearly erroneous. No evidence in the record suggests that Jolene’s relocation to Stebbins was for the purpose of decreasing her child support obligation. The court told Jolene it had “heard [her] testimony and . . . [did not] question . . . [her] sincerity and . . . the value [she] place[d] in reconnecting with [her] . . . cultural . . . roots . . . .” The court also found that both Jolene and her daughter derived some benefit from Jolene’s move to Stebbins, and Jyzyk agreed that Jolene benefitted to some extent from the move.
Here is the opinion in Griffith v. Caney Valley Public Schools (N.D. Okla.):
Briefs here.
Here is “Going Postal: How All-Mail Voting Thwarts Navajo Voters” from In These Times.
Here.
Bolick currently represents some non-Indian parents who are suing to overturn the federal Indian Child Welfare Act which requires require state courts when placing Indian children for adoption to give preference to a member of the child’s extended family. That is followed by priority by other members of the child’s tribe and, ultimately, other Indian families. Bolick also named DCS as a defendant because it follows that policy.
Lawsuit documents here, as always.
While a few cases might yet come in, we have our final list of 2015 appealed ICWA cases sorted. A note on the data–these are cases that are on Westlaw, and mentioned ICWA. If you know we are missing a case based on the numbers, *please* let me know so we can add it. We collect the case name, the date, the court, the state, whether the case is reported or not, the top two issues, up to three named tribes, the outcome of the case, and who appealed the case. These are standard state court ICWA cases, and do not include any of the ongoing federal litigation.
There were 201 ICWA cases in 2015. 35 of them were reported. As usual, California has the most number of cases, with 156 (146 unreported).The next highest state was Michigan, with 7 cases (3 unreported), Alaska with 6 (3 unreported), Arizona with 5 (4 unreported). The rest, with 2 reported are Idaho, Nebraska, New Mexico, and Washington.
With 1 reported are Alabama, Arkansas, Montana, New Jersey, New York, North Dakota, Ohio, Texas, and Wyoming.
California further breaks down with the highest number of cases (57) in the 2nd Appellate District (which includes L.A. County), followed by 33 in the 4th, 29 in the 1st, 16 in the 3rd, 15 in the 5th, and 6 in the 6th. Only the 2nd and 4th reported out any cases.
Supreme Courts in Alaska, Idaho, Montana, Nebraska, North Dakota, and Wyoming all heard ICWA cases. 98 of the 201 total cases were affirmed, 82 remanded (nearly all California notice cases), 5 dismissed, and 16 reversed.
The top issues in reported cases break down as follows: Notice (13), Determination of Indian Child (5), Active Efforts (4), Qualified Expert Witness (4), and Placement Preferences (3), Inquiry (1), Transfer to Tribal Court (1).
70 different tribes were represented in the cases, which include any time a parent claims tribal affiliation of any sort (so Cherokee has 58 of the 203 total cases as first tribe claimed, 21 as second tribe claimed and 5 as third, for a total of 84). In 31 cases, the tribe was unknown, in 4 the tribe was unnamed by the court. For those 31, 25 of the cases dealt with a lack of inquiry and/or notice.
Finally, of the 35 reported cases, mother appealed 15, father 10, both parents 4, tribe 4, and GAL 1.
Here:
Question presented:
Whether there is a Religious Freedom Restoration Act violation when the Government denies Native Americans access to land necessary for religious rites by the threat of civil or criminal trespass prosecution.
Lower court materials here.
Lorinda Riley has published “When a Tribal Entity Becomes a Nation: The Role of Politics in the Shifting Federal Recognition Regulations,” in the American Indian Law Review.
Here is a description excerpted from the article’s introduction:
This article explores how each presidential administration has both shaped and bent the federal recognition regulations to fulfill its political priorities. By merging a quantitative analysis of each administration’s federal recognition record and the political realities that each administration faced, this study provides a rare inquiry into the political nature of the recognition process. First, this article examines the regulatory history of federal recognition, including a detailed discussion of various versions of the regulation and accompanying guidance published by the Department of the Interior (DOI). Then the article provides an overview of how politics play into the regulatory process and the implementation of regulation. Finally, the article re-visits each administration’s actions related to federal recognition, and considers how each administration has utilized these regulations to serve its own political priorities.
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