Bailey Ulbricht on Indigenous Data Sovereignty

Bailey Ulbricht has published “Actualizing Indigenous Data Sovereignty Through Tribal Self-Governance” in the New Mexico Law Review.

Here is the abstract:

Data, as described by a Yurok Tribe council member, is “the original theft”—the first thing stolen from Native peoples in the United States. Indigenous data sovereignty seeks to redress this and prevent future data infractions by placing Indigenous communities in charge of decision-making about their own data. Yet with no established body of federal case law on tribal data authority, it is not immediately clear how Indigenous data sovereignty would fit within the complex and contradictory web of federal caselaw that confines tribes’ inherent sovereignty. This Article seeks to address this gap. First, as a policy matter, it argues that tribes are best suited to govern their own data. To illustrate this claim, this Article relies on interviews conducted with members and employees of the Yurok Tribe, the largest tribe in California, to explain what data sovereignty means to them and why it matters for tribal self-governance, economic security, cultural preservation, and the Tribe’s health and welfare. Second, as a legal matter, this Article lays out the favorable case for tribal authority to enforce tribal data sovereignty laws and policies against non-tribal members under each exception within the Montana framework. In anticipation of concerns about how to locate transient data or placeless activity, this Article proposes that federal and tribal courts use the Calder effects test, which assesses intentional forum-targeting in non-tribal cases. Finally, this Article concludes with a set of recommendations for tribes seeking to actualize their data sovereignty and for federal courts that may review future cases involving data sovereignty.

This is Hoopa, not Yurok, ICYW.

John Beaty on Tribal Eminent Domain

John Beaty has published “Tribal Eminent Domain: Sovereignty Gaps and Policy Solutions” in the New Mexico Law Review.

Here is the abstract:

This Article addresses the existence and scope of the tribal power of eminent domain. American Indian Tribes are sovereign entities within the United States and can exercise many traditional government powers. However, centuries of actions by the United States’ executive, legislative, and judicial branches have eaten away at the fabric of tribal sovereign powers. Currently, the scope of tribal sovereign authority is unclear with regards to eminent domain, the practice of a sovereign taking private property for public use. Eminent domain is important to many tribal governmental interests, including infrastructure development and fighting the fractionation of land interests. Although eminent domain is considered a quintessential sovereign power, scholars, courts, and tribes are unsure of the existence and scope of inherent eminent domain. This Article uses first principles, statutory enactments, tribal practice, and case law to argue that tribes retain some form of eminent domain. However, that power has limited application to nonmembers living on tribal land, hampering its effectiveness as both a practical tool and sovereign power. To fill the gaps, this Article proposes two statutes Congress can adopt, one reaffirming the existence of tribal eminent domain power and one delegating federal eminent domain power. By addressing the limits of tribal eminent domain, Congress can support tribes in their sovereign capacity as governments and allow tribes to fulfill their important policy priorities.

John Beaty on Tribal Eminent Domain

John Beaty has published “Tribal Eminent Domain: Sovereignty Gaps and Policy Solutions” in the New Mexico Law Review. PDF

Abstract:

This Article addresses the existence and scope of the tribal power of eminent domain. American Indian Tribes are sovereign entities within the United States and can exercise many traditional government powers. However, centuries of actions by the United States’ executive, legislative, and judicial branches have eaten away at the fabric of tribal sovereign powers. Currently, the scope of tribal sovereign authority is unclear with regards to eminent domain, the practice of a sovereign taking private property for public use. Eminent domain is important to many tribal governmental interests, including infrastructure development and fighting the fractionation of land interests. Although eminent domain is considered a quintessential sovereign power, scholars, courts, and tribes are unsure of the existence and scope of inherent eminent domain. This Article uses first principles, statutory enactments, tribal practice, and case law to argue that tribes retain some form of eminent domain. However, that power has limited application to nonmembers living on tribal land, hampering its effectiveness as both a practical tool and sovereign power. To fill the gaps, this Article proposes two statutes Congress can adopt, one reaffirming the existence of tribal eminent domain power and one delegating federal eminent domain power. By addressing the limits of tribal eminent domain, Congress can support tribes in their sovereign capacity as governments and allow tribes to fulfill their important policy priorities.

Pippa Browde on State Taxation in Indian Country in a Pandemic Economy

Pippa Browde has published “From Zero-Sum to Economic Partners: Reframing State Tax Policies in Indian Country in the Post-COVID Economy” in the New Mexico Law Review.

Here is the abstract:

The disparate impact COVID-19 has had on Indian Country reveals problems centuries in the making from the legacy of colonialism. One of those problems is state encroachment in Indian Country, including attempts to assert taxing authority within Indian Country. The issue of the reaches of state taxing authority in Indian Country has resulted in law that is both uncertain and highly complex, chilling both outside investment and economic development for tribes. As the United States emerges from COVID-19, to focus only on the toll exacted on tribes and their peoples ignores the tremendous opportunities for states to right these historical wrongs. Buoyed by federal COVID-relief funds, state and local governments are in a financial position to reframe their tax policies to promote tribal sovereignty and support economic development in Indian Country. This article argues for states to make diplomatic, responsible state and local tax policies that will create healthier intergovernmental relationships and an environment that in turn creates broader economic growth for tribes and states alike. Through policies requiring state governments to consult with tribes to make joint decisions on tax policy and by refraining from exercising taxing authority in Indian Country, states can move from a zero-sum game. Instead of competing for precious tax revenue, state and local governments can partner with tribes to expand the total amount of available revenue streams. Doing so will not just right the historical wrongs of colonialism—it could also help prevent future crises, such as the COVID-19 pandemic, from having such a disparate impact on tribes again.

Art Wood, LOC, blurry

Dylan Hedden & Stacy Leeds on McGirt’s Impact on the Indian Law Canon

Dylan R. Hedden-Nicely and Stacy L. Leeds have published “A Familiar Crossroads: McGirt v. Oklahoma and the Future of Federal Indian Law Canon” in the New Mexico Law Review.

Highly recommended!

New Scholarship on the “Bad Men” Clause in the Sherman Treaties

James D. Leach has published “Bad Men Among the Whites” Claims After Richard v. United States” in the New Mexico Law Review.

An excerpt:

This article contends that Richard provides Indians with exactly what they bargained for and received when their tribes negotiated and signed treaties with the United States. The government is unlikely to return the parties to their pre-agreement status by returning to Indians the lands they gave up in treaties. The right of Indians to receive what the government promised them in exchange for large amounts of tribal land would seem to be beyond moral or legal dispute. But as we will see, even these seemingly self-evident principles are now disputed.

Our post on the Richard case is here.

Howard Brown and Ray Austin Update Article on Navajo Preference in Employment Act

Howard L. Brown and the Honorable Raymond D. Austin have published “The Navajo Preference in Employment Act: A Review and Update of Cases and Rules, 2010–2012” in the New Mexico Law Review. 

The original article from 2010 is here.

Ray Austin & Howard Brown on the Navajo Preference in Employment Statute

Howard L. Brown & Hon. Raymond Austin will soon publish “The Twenty-Fifth Anniversary of the Navajo Preference in Employment Act” in the New Mexico Law Review. Here is a sneak preview: Navajo Preference in EmploymentAct, 40 NMLR 17 (2010).

A very, very timely and important article, especially given the recent Ninth Circuit order and remand in EEOC v. Peabody Coal.