New Scholarship on Tribal Customs and Land Use

John C. Hoelle has published his interesting paper, “Re-Evaluating Tribal Customs of Land Use Rights,” in the University of Colorado Law Review, available on SSRN.

Here is the abstract:

Indigenous peoples developed sustainable land tenure systems over countless generations, but these customary systems of rights are barely used by American Indian tribes today. Would increasing formal recognition of these traditional customs be desirable for tribes in a modern context? This Comment examines one traditional form of indigenous land tenure – the use right – and argues that those tribes that historically recognized use rights in land might benefit from increased reliance on these traditional customs. The Comment argues that in the tribal context, use rights can potentially be just as economically efficient, if not more so, than the Anglo-American system of unqualified, absolute ownership in land. The Comment also argues that tribal customs of land use rights may help preserve Indian cultural identity by cultivating core, non-economic values of tribal peoples. The Comment concludes by addressing some of the challenges tribes will likely face in attempting to more broadly rely on their customs of land use rights in the new millennium, while also remarking on some current and important opportunities for the re-integration of tribal customs in tribal land law.

Barsh on Applying Coast Salish Property Law in Environmental Law

Russel Lawrence Barsh has published “Coast Salish Property Law: An Alternative Paradigm for Environmental Relationships” in the Hastings West-Northwest Journal of Environmental Law and Policy.

Here is the introduction to this important paper:

            In different venues, Pacific Northwest anthropologist and linguist Wayne Suttles and Salish economist Ronald Trosper have argued that the indigenous peoples of Puget Sound and the Gulf of Georgia–the Coast Salish peoples of the ‘Salish Sea‘–achieved a high degree of economic stability and environmental sustainability through a distinctive regional form of social organization, law, and beliefs. This essay focuses on the nature of the Coast Salish legal paradigm and its implications for managing the living resources of the Salish Sea today. An appropriate starting-point is clarification of the nature of the prevailing paradigm of environmental law.

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