ABA Resolution #117 Adopted by House of Delegates

Link to final resolution and report here.

National Native American Bar Association Resolution on Indian Law in State Bar Exams

Here.

An excerpt:

NOW THEREFORE BE IT RESOLVED, that the National Native American Bar Association hereby urges all states to include or maintain Indian law on their respective bar examinations, especially those states with large Indian populations such as Alaska, Washington, Oregon, California, Idaho, Montana, Colorado, Arizona, New Mexico, Nevada, Utah, North and South Dakota, Oklahoma, Minnesota, Wisconsin, Michigan, New York, Connecticut, Maine, North Carolina, South Carolina, Virginia, Georgia, Louisiana and Florida.

Paul Spruhan Article: “Indian Law on State Bar Exams In the Age of the Uniform Bar Examination”

In the March 2015 edition of the Federal Lawyer.

Federal Lawyer bar exam article FINAL

Commentary on Indian Law on Bar Exams

Here is “Keeping Indian Law on State Bar Exams.

Fiander on Tort Claims and American Indian Plaintiffs

From the Washington State Bar News:

Representing My People

by Jack Fiander

This article is intended to be helpful to my fellow attorneys who may find themselves in the position of representing my people in personal-injury or wrongful-death cases. I also hope that the information here is helpful to my fellow tribal members in Washington state who may find themselves the victim of a tort or who have experienced personal injuries or a wrongful death in the family.

Here in the Pacific Northwest, my people live quietly among you in large numbers. Therefore, it is not unlikely that at some point in your legal career you will have the opportunity to represent them. This has been implicitly recognized since 2005, when the Board of Governors of the Washington State Bar Association made testing on the topic of federal Indian law part of the curriculum of the Washington State Bar examination. According to the Washington State Governor’s Office of Indian Affairs, there are no fewer than 29 federally recognized tribes in Washington. According to the 2000 U.S. Census, 164,481 residents of the state of Washington identify themselves as Native American or Alaskan Native.

I realize that it can raise uncomfortable issues such as discrimination or stereotyping by generalizing about my people. By the same token, I shall undoubtedly receive some opprobrium for sharing information regarding certain cultural beliefs with those outside the tribe. On the whole, however, I have come down on the side that it is important to the welfare of my people that I try to convey the important considerations which you should take into account when calculating damages in cases involving tribal clients, because they are easily overlooked.

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