Here.
Native America Calling: Monday, September 20, 2021 – ICWA: Federal protections for children under constant legal pressure
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Here.
Audio archived here.
Here: “Oliphant: four decades of hampered tribal jurisdiction.”
The blurb:
A U.S. Supreme Court decision in March, 1978 continues to hinder tribal sovereignty on a daily basis. The ruling in Oliphant v. Suquamish Indian Tribe stripped tribes of most criminal prosecutions against non-Indians. Those cases became the responsibility of the federal government. In his dissent, Justice Thurgood Marshall wrote “I am of the view that Indian tribes enjoy, as a necessary aspect of their retained sovereignty, the right to try and punish all persons who commit offenses against tribal law within the reservation.” The Violence Against Women Act was an attempt to remedy the persistent trend of non-Native abusers of Native women slipping through the cracks of the federal justice system. We’ll look at the distressing consequences of Oliphant and efforts through the years to fix it.
Book available here.
Fletcher will be appearing on a show titled “What TV gets right (and wrong) about Indian law.”
Update — the archived show is here.
This show aired on Tuesday. Guest commentators included Deb Haaland for the first half and John Dossett and Ann Tweedy for the second half.
Here’s the recording from earlier this week, featuring guests Alray Nelson, Sheldon Raymore, and your truly.
Here.
The show featured two of my favorite people — Catherine Grosso, MSU law prof, and Tamera Begay, a Navajo member who is two days away from graduating from MSU law school.
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